The T List: Five Things We Recommend This Week

Welcome to the T List, a newsletter from the editors of T Magazine. Each week, we share things we’re eating, wearing, listening to or coveting now. Sign up here to find us in your inbox every Wednesday. And you can always reach us at tlist@nytimes.com .


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A Pop-Up Housewares Shop in Downtown New York

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A textile work by the artist Megumi Shauna Arai for Tiwa Select hangs next to an assortment of kitchen necessities at Beverly’s NYC. Credit... Ryan Lowry

By Camille Okhio

Friday will see the opening of a new kind of general store in downtown New York, one informed by nostalgia and empathy as much as function. The fashion stylist Beverly Nguyen’s first foray into retail, the two-month pop-up shop Beverly’s NYC, will offer a tightly edited, affordable selection of household essentials — including the perfect martini glass, pepper mill and cast-iron pan, as well as olive oil she produced in collaboration with a family-owned company in Santa Ynez, Calif. — in a Chinatown space that conjures the same feelings of warmth and intimacy as the dinner parties that, before the pandemic, she threw regularly at her Manhattan apartment. The interior was a collaboration between Nguyen and two of her close friends, the architect Louis Rambert, known for his work with the firm Rafael de Cárdenas , and the film producer Kelly McGee (Nguyen’s partner in the project), and Superflower Studio , as well as a custom kidney-shaped ceramic cash wrap by Fefo Studio in Brooklyn. But Nguyen’s biggest influence was perhaps her grandmother, who owned a hardware store in Bien Hoa, Vietnam, in the 1960s; it was only after praying to her spirit, when a previous location fell through, that Nguyen secured the venue. Her family is also represented in a line of simple, supersoft towels and table linens that Nguyen developed with her parents, Vietnamese immigrants who began manufacturing apparel after arriving in the States as refugees in the 1980s. She hopes the space, which was previously a Chinese temple, will feel equally welcoming to her Chinese neighbors, many of whom have lived in the neighborhood for decades, and to newcomers to the city looking to make a home here. As she sees it, “the shop is really for anyone who wants to build their own conversation and their own community.” Beverly’s NYC, 22 Ludlow Street, New York, N.Y. 10002, beverlys.world .


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Sardines, Mussels and More, Ethically Sourced From Spain

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The 2020 limited-edition range of Pyscis tins include, clockwise from top left, vintage 2018 Beauty sardines, blue mussels with garlic and chile, Taste sardines in manzanilla extra-virgin olive oil and vintage 2018 bullet tuna fillets in Andalusian olive oil. Credit... Dale Cutts

By Eleonore Condo

For anyone wanting From about $9, pyscis.com .


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An Art Installation That Pays Tribute to Mall Culture

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A view of Maggie Lee’s “Daytime Sparkles” (2021) at Nordstrom in New York City. Credit... Connie Zhou

By Nikki Shaner-Bradford

In the folklore of suburban girlhood, the mall persists as a symbol of freedom and fantasy. Or so believes the multimedia artist Maggie Lee , whose latest installation, “Daytime Sparkles,” debuts at Nordstrom this week in partnership with the Whitney “Daytime Sparkles” will be on view through May 16, 225 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019.


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From Lemaire, a Collection Inspired by a Self-Taught Artist

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Looks from Lemaire’s spring 2021 collection. Credit... Estelle Hanania

By Jameson Montgomery

Born in the Mexican state of Jalisco, the artist Martín Ramírez left for California in 1925 to work on the railroads and in the mines. When the Great Depression hit, Ramírez, who didn’t speak English, found himself without a job or housing, and was picked up by the police and admitted against his will to a state hospital; he was eventually diagnosed with The capsule collection will launch April 2. From $295, us.lemaire.fr .


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A Virtual Tour of Philadelphia’s Monuments

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Left: Albert Wolff’s “The Lion Fighter” (1858). Right: A. Thomas Schomberg’s “Rocky” (1980). Credit... Lori Waselchuk/Monument Lab

By Courtney Coffman

Monument Lab , a Philadelphia-based creative studio founded in 2012 by Paul Farber and Ken Lum to facilitate the community’s engagement with public art through exhibitions and research initiatives, recently launched a free augmented reality app: OverTime. Developed in collaboration with the production company Download the app here for iOS. An app for Android users will be available later this year.


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In Southampton, a Pool Amid the Dunes



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