This is part of a collection of stories celebrating the many shapes retirement travel can take. Read more here.
When I was growing up, my parents traveled the globe working in the art world. My mother, Lynn Zelevansky, now 76, spent her career as a contemporary curator and museum director, focusing outside the classic New York and European spheres of that time on artists from South Korea, Mexico, and beyond. My father, Paul Zelevansky, 77, a visual artist and professor, traveled with her as often as he could, soaking up every culture like a sponge. When my mother was curating an enormous installation—constructed from church candles and cow bones—by Brazilian conceptual artist Cildo Meireles at MoMA, for example, feijoada brunches became a norm in our household. When my parents traveled back and forth to Tokyo as she organized a Yayoi Kusama retrospective at LACMA, Japanese techno became our daily soundtrack.
When my mother retired from working full-time at institutions and my father stopped teaching, I wondered what they might do.
Keep traveling—that’s what.
Their adventures have persisted as predictably as their omnipresent black wardrobe, whether they’re hitting the Venice Biennale every fall without fail, touring Spain’s Basque Country after an opening for an Ad Reinhardt show in Madrid, or meeting art world friends in Vietnam a talk on minimalism, given by my mother, in Singapore.
Lured by a sense of intrigue, community, social connection, and multilayered cultural experience, a widening circle of retirees (and semi-retirees) are spending their newfound leisure time traversing the globe from Berlin to Morocco to Mexico City in pursuit of art, attending bustling art fairs, lavish parties, intimate artist studio visits, private gallery tours, and museum openings, not only to see and buy art, but also to connect and stay stimulated while immersed in beauty. “The art world is really a global community,” my mother muses.
Because the artistic sphere is both a social network and an industry, retirement-age people who travel for art are both former insiders and hobbyists. “The social element of the art world is very central to what it is,” says Paul. “And so you go to these events to meet people, reconnect, make new connections.”
It’s not just art in museums. I find art everywhere—the colorful doorways in Brazil, cool icebergs in Patagonia and Iceland, elaborate wrought iron signs in Madrid.
J. Patrice Marandel, 79, a Frenchman with an infectious smile, missed the ease of that social and professional overlap as well as the nearly constant travel to acquire work when he retired from being chief curator of European painting at Los Angeles County Museum of Art after twenty-three years in 2017. “I used to
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When the sun begins its descent, painting a mesmerizing golden hue over the Sea of Cortez, a sense of enchantment will envelop guests as they approach the Viceroy Los Cabos. This luxurious haven transcends the definition of a mere resort; it stands as a tribute to the opulence of Mexico. With a history of exploring exclusive destinations, Viceroy Los Cabos stands out as a unique gem in my travels as a triple threat: Culinary, Spirits, and Luxe Experiences.
A transport company is offering £2 tickets for coach trips across the UK to be taken up to May 12. With a £1 service fee, that means travellers planning journeys can book long-distance tickets from £3 on the FlixBus website or app.
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Most travelers visiting Istanbul for the first time tend to stick to the hotspots like Taksim Square and Sultanahmet when booking a hotel in the city—which makes sense if you’re hoping to check off the most famous attractions in Istanbul. But once you’ve visited the Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque, taking a ferry ride over to the Asian—or Anatolian—side of Istanbul is where you’ll find the more local-leaning attractions.
Asian and Pacific Islander people have played a profoundly significant role in shaping American history, contributing to the rich heritage of the United States in countless ways.
Recognized as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO since 1982, the historic center of Florence boasts a vast collection of medieval and Renaissance art and architecture, despite its relatively compact size.
The magic of hospitality is staying in a place that isn’t anything like home. A castle, a treehouse, a farm, a yurt: all such places promise an escape from the every day, especially when combined with luxury flourishes that boggle the mind. I am still wondering how ice showed up in the Gobi desert at the Three Camels Lodge in Mongolia or how blueberries came to be served at breakfast at the Explora Lodge on Easter Island. Or, in the case of the Four Seasons in Madrid, how a hotel combined seven historic properties into one sensational art destination.
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