Prøve GULL - Gratis
MUSE of the MEDITERRANEAN
Travel+Leisure US
|June 2025
Why is the blue-chip art world converging on a tiny Greek island? Tony Perrottet explores Hydra, where chill vibes meet cutting-edge creativity.
-
TRAVELING TO HYDRA is normally a relaxing, almost soporific affair. The tiny Greek island, only 90 minutes by ferry from Athens, has been renowned for generations as a dreamy, car-free outpost where the only traffic sound is the clip-clop of donkey hooves and the most stressful decision is which white wine to choose with dinner. But I was heading there in mid-June, when Hydra is an offbeat stop on the art-world circuit and the energy resembles that of a wild night at Art Basel Miami Beach.
The cultural frenzy had begun earlier that day in Athens, with brunch at the art-filled mansion of Greek collectors Dakis and Lietta Joannou. It was a lavish affair with a book bazaar, buffet, and cocktail bar spilling onto expansive, sun-dappled patios where celebrity artists like the Joannous’ friend Jeff Koons mingled with elegantly coiffed curators from Zurich, London, and Cologne.
Mid-afternoon, I joined a group of fashionable Greek artists in a convoy of taxis bound for the Athenian port of Piraeus, just in time to catch the 5:30 p.m. fast ferry across the Saronic Gulf to Hydra. Soon we were all gaping in wonder at the first glimpse of the fabled island that Henry Miller memorably described in 1939 as having a “wild and naked perfection.” He praised its “aesthetically perfect” port, where blue-and-white buildings cluster like a stadium above the harbor in “the very epitome of...flawless anarchy.”
No sooner had we stepped ashore than we were whisked via a five-minute boat ride to Mandraki Bay, where the gallery Wilhelmina’s has operated in a splendid 19th-century mansion since 2023. As the sun dipped below the horizon, a raucous reception began for a group show called “Magic Mirror,” which showcased 33 emerging Greek and international artists, the majority of whom were women. Wine flowed. Tables groaned with treats: plates of seafood, bowls of Greek salad, tubs of plump olives. More guests arrived by foot and boat, until the gallery was mobbed.
Denne historien er fra June 2025-utgaven av Travel+Leisure US.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Travel+Leisure US
Travel+Leisure US
Earthly Paradise
Wild and tame, loose and lyrical: over centuries, the English have elevated garden design to an art form. On a tour of the country’s lush southeast, Amy Waldman swoons over a landscape in full bloom.
14 mins
April 2026
Travel+Leisure US
MAKING LOCAL CONSERVATION GLOBAL
“I’m a crazy bird person,” says Adam Betuel. That’s a point of pride for the executive director of Birds Georgia, the nonprofit he’s been leading for more than a decade.
1 min
April 2026
Travel+Leisure US
Lightening Its Impact
It has become de rigueur for remote luxury lodges to put an emphasis on sustainability, but Beckons is working to take its globe-spanning portfolio further.
1 min
April 2026
Travel+Leisure US
GROWING TOGETHER
Conceived as a small cooperative of female farmers back in 2000, the Grenada Network of Rural Women Producers, or GRENROP, has since expanded to a nearly 80-member force for sustainable agriculture.
1 min
April 2026
Travel+Leisure US
Restoring an African Jewel
It was once one of the greatest safari parks in Africa. Yet by the beginning of this century, Gorongosa National Park, in Mozambique, was a wildlife wasteland.
1 min
April 2026
Travel+Leisure US
Taking the Broad View
“When the problems are big, we need big solutions,” says Deli Saavedra, the director of Jaguar Rivers Initiative.
1 min
April 2026
Travel+Leisure US
Reinvesting in Natural Wonders
Millions flock to southeast Alaska’s Inside Passage every year to witness humpback whales breaching and massive glaciers calving into the sea.
1 min
April 2026
Travel+Leisure US
GIVING VOICE TO THE NEEDY
Since 2011, the renowned Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli and his wife, Veronica Berti Bocelli, have raised more than $90 million for the Andrea Bocelli Foundation, which is now involved in more than 50 projects worldwide.
1 min
April 2026
Travel+Leisure US
Creating More Space for Calm
Sweden’s newest nature preserve is also one of its most distinctive: Nämdöskärgården National Park, which was established in 2025, spans about 100 square miles, around 97 percent of which is brackish water that’s populated by blue mussel beds and coral-like red algae.
1 min
April 2026
Travel+Leisure US
REWILDING THE SCOTTISH HIGHLANDS
The largest private landowner in the United Kingdom, Danish billionaire Anders Holch Povlsen, has a 200-year vision to rewild 220,000 acres in the Scottish Highlands.
1 min
April 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

