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A Look at Nicolas Ghesquière’s Louis Vuitton Cruise Collections

Travel through a decade of fashion creativity at Nicolas Ghesquière’s Louis Vuitton Cruise shows

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Throughout Nicolas Ghesquière’s distinguished decade at Louis Vuitton, one of his standout legacies has been his penchant for selecting fascinating architectural settings for the brand’s Cruise collections.

Each location, ranging from historical sites steeped in rich heritage to cutting-edge contemporary structures, offered a unique backdrop for the prestigious fashion show.

In 2014, Ghesquière kicked off his debut Cruise 2015 collection in Monaco. The underwater-themed catwalk took place outside the principality’s Place du Palais in a modern glass construction that offered an intriguing contrast to the 13th-century royal palace.

The mid-century trove of Palm Springs, California played host to the Cruise 2016 show the following year at the spectacular Bob and Dolores Hope Estate. Designed by acclaimed architect John Lautner, the futuristic estate, built in the shape of a volcano with an undulating concrete roof, formed an interesting tribute to the Desert Modernism style.

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Top left: Afuturistic suspension bridge leads to the Miho Museum in Kyoto, the stage for Vuitton’s Cruise 2018 show. Top right: The Salk Institute in San Diego was chosen for the 2023 show. Bottom right: The Niterói Contemporary Art Museum in Rio de Janeiro was the backdrop for the Cruise 2017 show. Bottom left: The Axe Majeur installation in Paris was one of the settings for the 2022 show.

The backdrop to Ghesquière’s 2017 collection was the Niterói Contemporary Art Museum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, an iconic hillside building shaped like a white flying saucer, once described by Ghesquière as a place where one is “transported into a relationship where nature, geography, and architecture come together.”

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Kyoto’s Miho Museum, seen from the metal tunnel at the entrance.

The tranquil beauty of Kyoto, Japan surrounded the 2018 show staged at the Miho Museum. Accessible via a futuristic suspension bridge and tunnel, the spectacular building was inspired by its lush mountain setting and the utopian ideals of Shangri-La. The Miho Museum was designed by renowned Chinese-American architect I.M. Pei, known for his work on the Louvre pyramid in Paris.

Order the Magnifissance print edition to read the full story.

This story is from Magnifissance Issue 126

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