Louis Vuitton Cruise 2027 Collection
At New York’s The Frick Collection, Nicolas Ghesquière delivered one of his sharpest Cruise collections yet for Louis Vuitton—a collision of Gilded Age refinement, downtown attitude, and the graphic energy of Keith Haring.
The historic Upper East Side mansion became the setting for a collection that explored New York through contrast: uptown polish against street culture, aristocratic interiors against pop-art irreverence. While other luxury houses chased spectacle this season, Ghesquière opted for something more intimate and cerebral, transforming the museum’s galleries into a living conversation between art, fashion, and craftsmanship.






The collection opened with deceptively simple American staples—jeans paired with a vivid red knit top—before unfolding into a series of sharply constructed looks infused with Haring-inspired graphics and bold color. Leather jackets appeared pieced together like wearable canvases, while satin boxing shorts, sculptural peplum tops, and tailored coat dresses gave the lineup a restless, urban elegance.
Haring’s influence pulsed throughout the collection. Graffiti-like motifs traced across silk-trimmed dresses, patchwork leather outerwear, and accessories, injecting the house’s precision craftsmanship with a downtown edge. The palette leaned unapologetically pop: electric mango, saturated lilac, deep navy, and acid green.






Accessories, unsurprisingly, carried commercial force. Ghesquière introduced playful New York references through novelty bags shaped like Chinese takeout containers and vinyl records, alongside reworked Louis Vuitton classics. Footwear stood out as well—hybrid designs somewhere between boxing sneakers and futuristic boots, crafted from individually stitched leather strips.



Despite moments of deliberate eccentricity—fezzes, layered leather minis, exaggerated proportions—the collection felt unusually cohesive. Ghesquière balanced experimentation with wearability, grounding even the most artistic looks in a distinctly modern wardrobe.

The finale returned to the spirit of old New York society, reimagined through the designer’s futuristic lens. Voluminous ruffled blouses reminiscent of Gilded Age portraits were paired with multi-pocket cargo trousers, collapsing centuries of style into a single silhouette.

