“Visionary Journeys” Exhibition: The Maison Reimagines Its Legacy Through Twelve Chapters
August 18, 2025- Louis Vuitton Exhibition in Osaka: “Visionary Journeys“
This summer in Osaka, Louis Vuitton unveiled a history lesson through motion, light, and the cultural bridge it has built with Japan over the decades. At the Nakanoshima Museum of Art, the exhibition titled “Visionary Journeys” runs until September 17, 2025, weaving a rich narrative of craftsmanship, creativity, and Japanese influence into a 12-room journey. A total of over 1,000 objects are on display, including 200+ Japan-specific artifacts, archival sketches, rare artworks, leather goods, and scenographic installations by Shohei Shigematsu of OMA, all curated under the vision of Florence Müller.
Entering the Atrium
The visit begins in a soaring five-story atrium filled with glowing trunks stacked like lanterns. From here, a dome assembled from 138 trunks rises above visitors — a literal cathedral to travel.
Twelve Chapters of a Journey- The exhibition follows a twelve-chapter path:
- Origins: Bamboo-framed displays recall the Asnières atelier, with the first flat-top trunks and Steamer bags.
- Expeditions: Archival luggage appears suspended alongside air-balloon structures, symbolising Louis Vuitton’s link with exploration.
- The Monogram Galaxy: A circular hall shows a rare 1897 registration sample surrounded by Monogram bags orbiting like planets — an evolution of the most iconic pattern in fashion.
- Craftsmanship: A working atelier space highlights bespoke pieces, collaborations with Sho Hirano and Verdy, and demonstrations of techniques usually kept behind the scenes.

Japan as Muse
The heart of the exhibition is the room Louis Vuitton in Japan. More than 200 objects underline the maison’s fascination with Japanese aesthetics. Highlights include:
- A toiletry kit inspired by the geometric tsuba sword guards collected by Gaston-Louis Vuitton.
- An 1833 Hokusai woodblock print of the Kirifuri Waterfall, displayed beside a 1933 puzzle created for Sacha Guitry using the same motif.
- A photograph of the Champs-Élysées storefront in 1921, redesigned as a Japanese garden for the visit of Crown Prince Hirohito.
Monogram Origins and Masterpieces
A rare Monogram registration document, with its original box and label, is presented for the first time. Beside it, a magnificent trunk once belonging to Shogun Tokugawa echoes the motifs that may have inspired Georges Vuitton in 1896.

Collaborations Across Generations
The final rooms celebrate Japanese collaborations that transformed Louis Vuitton. Yayoi Kusama brings her dotted universes. Takashi Murakami reimagines the Multicolore Monogram. Nigo adds a sharp street vision. Rei Kawakubo pushes radical interpretations.
From there, the story shifts to designers who carried this dialogue forward. Virgil Abloh, Kim Jones, and Nicolas Ghesquière integrated kimonos, koi-nobori, lanterns, and samurai details. Each reference becomes a bold fashion statement, linking tradition to contemporary style.
The exhibition closes with a reminder of the Maison’s very first Japanese client, Sameshima Naonobu, who ordered trunks in 1874. From that purchase to today’s global creative exchanges, Visionary Journeys frames Louis Vuitton’s story as a bridge between Paris and Japan.

📌 “Visionary Journeys” — An Exhibition by Louis Vuitton
📅 July 15 – September 17, 2025
📍 Nakanoshima Museum of Art, Osaka
⏰ Tue–Thu & Sun: 10 a.m.–5 p.m. (last entry 4:30 p.m.)
🎟️ Nakanoshima Museum of Art Ticket Site
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