The 63-year-old Japanese artist Takashi Murakami, the oldest son of a taxi driver and a homemaker, grew up in a one-room ...
As is often the case with vintage designer bags, the price of pre-loved pieces compared to brand-new buys can be lower – ...
Aside from the colorful monograms, LV x Murakami also included the iconic cherry blossom face and other characters that adorned the bags, which have been rumored to also return later this year.
Louis Vuitton is now marking that tipping point in its history by re-releasing both the original Jacobs-approved bags and a whole new slew of Murakami-fied wares, including belts, sneakers ...
It’s been more than 20 years since Japanese artist Takashi Murakami collaborated with Louis Vuitton. He was recruited by then-creative director Marc Jacobs to produce a series of bags and ...
Such is the fuss around the first chapter of the Louis Vuitton x Takashi Murakami re-edition. Back in 2003, the quirky Japanese artist added playful splashes of colour to the French maison’s storied ...
Murakami’s motifs and characters are featured across 170 Louis Vuitton designs in Chapter One, from bags and belts to shoes, scarves and a skateboard, as well as one of the house’s iconic ...
The first Louis Vuitton x Takashi Murakami print was featured on a slew of handbags from the French house, but the most legendary were the Speedy and Pochette in white and black canvas covered in ...
Although it’s hard to imagine otherwise, there was once a time when Louis Vuitton wasn’t the global fashion behemoth we know ...
These days, artist x luxury brand collaborations are dime a dozen, but Louis Vuitton has long led the way, recruiting some of the biggest names in contemporary art to produce creative riffs on ...
On the 20th anniversary of a landmark collaboration that united the fields of art and fashion (now each something of a ...