Vogue June 2019

(Dana P.) #1

151


dress, $995; Zero +
Maria Cornejo stores.
Gabriela Artigas &
Company necklace,
$280; gabrielaartigas
.com. On Harris: Stella
McCartney waistcoat
and pants, price upon
request; similar styles
at Stella McCartney,
NYC. David Yurman
earrings, $1,900;
davidyurman.com. On
Hnath: Saint Laurent
by Anthony Vaccarello
jacket, $3,950;
Saint Laurent, NYC.
A.P.C. sweater, $265;
apc-us.com. On
Majok: Gucci skirt,

$5,980; gucci.com. On
Harris: Thom Browne
jacket ($2,400) and
pants ($1,890); Thom
Browne, NYC. Gucci
shirt, $1,200; gucci
.com. Gabriela Artigas
& Company necklace,
$360; gabrielaartigas
.com. On Peiffer:
Simone Rocha dress,
$2,690; Simone
Rocha, NYC.

CROSSING BORDERS
128–129: Apron,
$84; food52. TOME
dress, $795; shopbop
.com. Earrings, $750;
tedmuehling.com.

Pippa Small Jewellery
ring ($2,260) and
bracelet ($2,680);
(210) 260-9222.

PIER PRESSURE
132–133: Longchamp
red strap on
Longchamp bag,
$560; longchamp
.com. Marni chain
belt, $990; Marni
stores. Sneakers,
$750; Loewe, Miami.
134: Coat, price
upon request. Dolce
& Gabbana dress,
$1,445; select Dolce
& Gabbana stores.
Earrings, $1,200;

(800) 845-6790.


135: Garment bag,
price upon request.
Earrings, $540;
(800) 845-6790.
136: Woven handbag,
price upon request.
Bottega Veneta white
tote bag, $4,900;
(800) 845-6790.
Akris tank top (under
long top), $595; akris
.com. 137: Chain belt,
$990; Marni stores.
138–139: Bag and hat,
priced upon request.
141: Bucket bag, price
upon request. 142:
Proenza Schouler
bra, $790; Proenza

Schouler, NYC.
143: Tote bag, price
upon request. In this
story: Tailor: Daniela
Lombardi.

INDEX
144–145: 5. Bag
($2,145) and
attachable leather
strap ($325). 12.
Watch, $5,700. 15.
Fishing rod, $11,800.

LAST LOOK
152: Bag, $5,200;
select Chanel stores.

ALL PRICES
APPROXIMATE

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as a positive ran smack into the lim-
its of her own loner tendencies. Cain
moved with her husband and young
children out of New York City to the
Berkshires—a leafy, lake-y rural area
of summer homes and tiny, charm-
ing New England towns not far from
where I live now. They arrived in the
middle of a freezing, gray March, and
found themselves alone against the
backdrop of giant mountains, with
no one in sight. “I was so intensely
miserable,” she recalls. Six weeks later,
they had moved again, this time to the
densely populated bedroom commu-
nity of Nyack, New York. “Find the
people you need,” she reiterates. May-
be those people will be teetering in tree
pose next to you at your local Bikram
studio. Though if you happen to find
them while lunging, in tandem, via a
strong WiFi connection, so be it. @

CROSSING BORDERS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 131
the pyramid—Alice Waters with her
edible schoolyard, José Andrés in
post-hurricane Puerto Rico, Massi-
mo Bottura’s crusade against waste,

or Jamie Oliver’s campaign to keep
junk food out of children’s hands. In
the year since the ascension of López
Obrador, Cámara has been offered
an array of potential roles with long
names and vague descriptions. Last
summer the president asked her to
take over a tourism board that he sus-
pected was rife with fraud. She swiftly
closed it down.
“I said, ‘What can I really help you
with other than listening to you and
telling you my very uneducated opin-
ion about your very complex political
actions?’ ” Cámara recalls. “I can give
you my common sense, which doesn’t
necessarily amount to much. I think
he just enjoys my company.” Friends
have joked that Cámara will be López
Obrador’s Valerie Jarrett, a close ad-
viser whose role eludes easy definition.
The details remain hazy, but this fall
Cámara will take charge of a presi-
dential commission on food whose
goal is to ensure that major corpora-
tions’ practices in Mexico promote
health and protect the environment.
López Obrador has become an
enormously popular president by

making big promises. He is fanatical
about corruption and trimming gov-
ernment fat and has championed so-
cial programs. But some critics have
expressed concern that he may well
have too much power, and Cámara
says that she has often found herself
needing to reassure certain friends
that he has no intention of remaining
in office for 40 years. “No rich person
wants to lose their privilege,” she says.
As soon as it became clear that
she would be taking a position in
the government, Cámara’s current
boyfriend, a professional poker play-
er turned real estate developer, sug-
gested that she try Game of Thrones.
A great skeptic of television, she
nevertheless watched seven seasons
straight through. “Who gets to have
what? It’s still such a crucial ques-
tion,” she muses. “I have always
found that food, in practical terms, is
what brings together all the most im-
portant issues that the planet needs
to solve.” If world affairs do get de-
cided over a round of palomas, it will
be on Cámara’s watch. Summer is
coming. @
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