Louis Vuitton Art Déco: 100 anni di eredità artistica tra moda e design

La mostra celebra l’innovazione e la creatività di Gaston-Louis e dell’Art Déco

A cento anni dall’Esposizione Internazionale di Arti Decorative e Industriali Moderne di Parigi – evento in cui fu presentata la Maison, da sempre in simbiosi con artisti di rilievo come Pierre-Émile Legrain, Camille Cless-Brothier e Gaston Le Bourgeois – oggi, 26 settembre 2025, presso lo spazio espositivo LV Dream (26 Quai de la Mégisserie, 1er), prende il via la mostra Louis Vuitton Art Déco. L’evento, a ingresso gratuito su prenotazione, esplora l’eredità di Gaston-Louis Vuitton, nipote del fondatore, la sua innovazione artistica, il suo gusto estetico, il suo contributo all’arte dell’allestimento delle vetrine (una sezione del percorso celebra il suo genio nel trasformare le vetrine dei negozi in spazi innovativi) e il modo in cui la Maison ha contribuito a definire quel fermento artistico.

Linee geometriche ed essenziali si raccontano attraverso oltre 30 pezzi, molti inediti, disposti in otto sale tematiche: Family Heritage; 1925: The Louis Vuitton Consecration; Art Déco Manifesto; Elegance and Beauty at Louis Vuitton; The Art of Windows; Colours, Forms and Materials; From Drawing to Advertising: The Process of Creativity; Beauty in Travel.


In un connubio di moda, design e storia, l’allestimento esalta accessori e creazioni iconiche come la borsa Champs-Élysées.

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One hundred years after the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris – an event at which the Maison was presented, having always worked in symbiosis with prominent artists such as Pierre-Émile Legrain, Camille Cless-Brothier, and Gaston Le Bourgeois – today, September 26, 2025, at the LV Dream exhibition space (26 Quai de la Mégisserie, 1er), the Louis Vuitton Art Déco exhibition will open. The event, which is free to attend upon reservation, explores the legacy of Gaston-Louis Vuitton, grandson of the founder, his artistic innovation, his aesthetic taste, his contribution to the art of window dressing (a section of the exhibition celebrates his genius in transforming shop windows into innovative spaces), and how the Maison helped define that artistic ferment.
Geometric and essential lines are expressed through more than 30 pieces, many of which are unpublished, arranged in eight themed rooms: Family Heritage; 1925: The Louis Vuitton Consecration; Art Deco Manifesto; Elegance and Beauty at Louis Vuitton; The Art of Windows; Colors, Forms, and Materials; From Drawing to Advertising: The Process of Creativity; Beauty in Travel.
In a combination of fashion, design, and history, the exhibition highlights accessories and iconic creations such as the Champs-Élysées bag.

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