Issue link: http://papercitymagazine.uberflip.com/i/1545489
Look to iconic kitchens from past decades — and centuries — to chart your course to the not-white cucina. 50 JULIAN SCHNABEL PHILIP JOHNSON FROM THE BOOK VOGUE LIVING: HOUSES GARDENS PEOPLE, ALFRED A. KNOPF, 2007. PHOTO FRANÇOIS HALARD. FROM THE BOOK CABANA ANTHOLOGY: ANNIVERSARY EDITION, VENDOME, 2024 CAROL HIGHSMITH Olatz Schnabel, former wife of painter Julian Schnabel, in the kitchen of their West Village home, 1995. The building was formerly a 19th-century perfume factory — hence, the 16-foot-high ceilings. The artist's Dentro Dite, 1993, hangs on the wall. The kitchen of Philip Johnson's Mies van der Rohe-inspired Glass House, New Canaan, Connecticut. The home has not changed in design or decor since its completion in 1949. The kitchen functions as one plane of the simple floor plan, with the closet and bedroom as another, both anchored by the circular bathroom. Absinthe-green kitchen in a taverna on Hydra. Photo Miguel Flores-Vianna. HYDRA By Chloe Chitwood

