Spanish Lesson. Louis Vuitton Resort 2025

Twelve years ago, in his final show for Balenciaga, Nicolas Ghesquière referenced Spanish culture with finesse and grace by revisiting the famous, stiff ruffles from a Cristobal Balenciaga dress circa 1968. This was one of the greatest Ghesquière collections ever, and an absolute sublimation of his tenure at the brand. In 2024, the designer returns to Spain again, physically, and with Louis Vuitton. The Hypostyle Room of Antoni Gaudi’s Park Güell in Barcelona was a fitting background for Nicolas’ off-kilter take on Velazquez, Goya, as well as the legendary filmmaker Luis Bunuel – even though the results felt a bit heavy-handed (which was never the case at his Balenciaga). The resort 2025 collection began with a parade of tailored, mostly neutral looks, all worn with straw gaucho hats and mirrored racing shades. Ghesquière said that the first exits were modeled on the sailor’s traditional vareuse – note their wide collars – but their broad shoulders and upside-down triangle shapes borrowed equally from the 1980s silhouettes of his youth. By the end, though, the strictness of his jupe tailleurs and coat dresses was replaced by the voluptuous drape of silk skirts and trousers, their chiaroscuro folds of silk nodding in the direction of the Spanish masters he referred to. The white cloak made you immediately think of the architectural habits of priests captured by Francisco de Zurbaran. Meanwhile, pops of polka dots and ruffles nodded more to the culture of flamenco, than Balenciaga’s heritage. When Ghesquière comes to work, he delivers collections that have all these Easter eggs to decipher.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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