The Louvre is the crossroads of the world—one of the globe’s most
popular museums with more than 7 million people visiting annually.
It’s
closed on Tuesdays, but tonight several hundred guests were invited to
the Cour Marly in the Richelieu wing to watch Louis Vuitton’s models
wind their way through the 17th- and 18th-century sculptures wearing
Nicolas Ghesquière’s new collection. It’s a first-ever for the Louvre.
Shows have been held on its grounds and in the sublevel in years past,
but never in its central sculpture atrium. Ghesquière said Vuitton was
invited by the museum to do so, which gives a sense of the company’s
place in French culture.
“Today, when some people make us want to
believe that the frontiers are stronger and stronger,” Ghesquière said.
“I think fashion
has always broken those frontiers. Especially in Paris—it’s the land of
foreign designers; it’s so multicultural. Being in the Louvre where
everyone is welcome, where there is no limit of culture, of nationality,
is a strong message.”
Article and Images from vogue.com
Article and Images from vogue.com