Messika’s Moderniste launch at Château ZZ was equal parts art opening, film screening, and proof of what this city has become.
Messika’s Moderniste launch at Château ZZ was equal parts art opening, film screening, and proof of what this city has become.

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There is a building in Miami that most people have never heard of, and that is precisely the point. Château ZZ, built in 1931 by architect Martin L. Hampton and French in every instinct — twin octagonal towers, composed geometry, a quiet authority — sits as a counterpoint to the city that has grown up around it. Miami moves fast. Château ZZ does not. That tension is exactly why Messika chose it.

The Parisian high jewelry maison hosted an evening there last week to celebrate the launch of Moderniste, its new collection starring ambassador Julianne Moore. The guest list included Moore and her daughter Liv Freundlich, Helena Christensen, Candice Swanepoel, Karolina Kurkova, Gunna, and Romain Grosjean.

The evening had layers. Upstairs, a cinema room hosted a screening of the Moderniste campaign film, directed by Ezra Petronio and Valérie Messika herself. Downstairs, ten pieces from Terres d’Instinct, Messika’s high jewelry collection, were set against the restaurant’s lush surroundings as a quiet exhibition. DJ Hugo Milochevitch gave the night its rhythm.

The collection itself is worth understanding in the context of where it launched. Moderniste holds gold to the standard of the diamond — sculpted, faceted, every surface considered. Circle and square. Polished and brushed. Refraction at every angle. It is jewelry that thinks like architecture, which is perhaps why a 1931 estate with octagonal towers felt like the right room. The geometry rhymes.

“Tonight in Miami, we celebrate more than a collection. Moderniste marks a new chapter in my creative journey — a true expression of maturity and vision.”
Valérie Messika

Miami has become, over the past decade, one of the few American cities with genuine cultural weight — not borrowed from New York or Los Angeles, but built from its own particular mix of art, architecture, money, and light. The people choosing to live here permanently, in the residences rising along Brickell and the Design District and the waterfront, are the same people filling rooms like this on a Tuesday night.