âHow do you dress like an auction house?â seems like a faux-philosophical question posed by an insufferable âart guyâ you might run into at a New York cocktail party. But itâs also a real question that was recently asked by two (very sufferable) individuals: Sothebyâs head of media Kristina OâNeill and Frame co-founder and creative director Erik Torstensson.
OâNeill, formerly the editor-in-chief of WSJ Magazine, joined the 281-year-old institution at the in 2024. One of her main responsibilities? âTo think about how the Sothebyâs brand can connect with the broader cultural conversation,â she tells Vogue. âWeâre encouraged to be very creative and out of the box in our thinking.â Brainstorming and âthrowing spaghetti at the wallâ culminated with the following idea: what if Sothebyâs had their own fashion collection? And if they did, what would that look like?
OâNeill remembered the launch Frame did with the Ritz Paris, where they translated the iconic hotelâs âRitz Blueâ aesthetic into sweaters, sweatshirts, and button downs. She rang up the brandâs founder, Torstensson. Could he do the same for Sotheby’s?
A moodboard was born. Richard Gere. Harrison Ford. The Hamptons. Tom Wolfeâs Bonfire of the Vanities. Oliver Stoneâs Wall Street. And on June 4, an official Frame and Sothebyâs collaboration is born too.
Photo: Sean Thomas
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