The Inaugural Recollect Salon Celebrates Lunar New Year

Held in the Chelsea Mercantile, Recollect, hosted by Nolan Feng and Silver Chang, marked its inaugural Lunar New Year dinner salon. Conceived around the Fire Horse Year, the gathering positioned Lunar New Year as both cultural preservation and contemporary authorship, bringing together a cross-disciplinary community of artists, designers, technologists, and friends to experience what celebration looks like when heritage is carried into metropolitan life. The evening centered on intentional hosting, ritual participation, and collective alignment, brought to life through thoughtful partnerships with Rémy Martin, West Elm, Maison Detto, Hudson Wilder, and 25hours NYC.

The aesthetic was unmistakably Lunar New Year, with red paper cuttings, window flowers, and envelopes placed with intention, but the presentation felt deliberately contemporary. The hosting approach reflected a new generation’s relationship to embodied rituals that are thoughtful, design-forward, and collaborative. Sponsors like West Elm played a visible but integrated role in shaping the environment. The modern salon-style format leaned into intentional hosting, with many celebrating with chosen family while relatives were continents away. Traditional Chinese paper cutting and conversation became anchors for the evening, as guests sat down to participate while connecting with new and old friends.

Dinner was served family-style, encouraging guests to pass plates, reach across the table, and engage in conversation that felt more rooted in tradition. The environment, shaped by intentional furniture placement, layered textiles, and warm lighting, made the act of gathering feel elevated but not inaccessible. The hosting itself became part of the cultural expression and a subtle reframing of tradition. It created a container where friends could become stand-ins for relatives, where culture could be introduced to partners and collaborators who didn’t grow up inside it.

There was also a wish wall installed along one side of the space, where guests wrote intentions for the year ahead. Unlike the performative goal-setting often associated with the Gregorian New Year, these notes felt more collective, with themes of stability, health, momentum, and collaboration. The Year of the Horse, often associated with drive and force, hovered over the evening symbolically. In Chinese zodiac cycles, the Fire Horse in particular carries intensity, galloping with ambition, volatility, and synergy.

What made the gathering feel distinctly contemporary was its understanding of aesthetics as language. Design became narrative, expressed through the clean silhouettes of the furniture, the restrained palette punctuated by red, and the integration of sponsor partnerships without overt branding, reflecting a generation that understands cultural celebration as both visual and communal.

Holidays can carry a complicated emotional charge because they remind you of what’s distant. They expose the gap between childhood and adulthood, between homeland and adopted city. Yet they also create opportunity to gather across difference, teach friends about your customs, and celebrate not just where you’re from, but who you’ve become.

By the end of the evening, it was clear that this wasn’t a traditional Lunar New Year. It was a new ritual shaped by creative direction, collaborative hosting, and new connections and a celebration that honored heritage while acknowledging evolution. Red envelopes distributed at the end of the evening carried symbolic weight: gestures of blessing and continuity. In New York, tradition rarely remains static. It adapts and gathers in new rooms. It is styled, reframed, and reinterpreted by the people who carry it forward.

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