Louis Vuitton presents Arts & Culture Program Spring-Summer 2026, an invitation to discover new perspectives on arts and culture 

Published on 05.06.2026 • 2 MINUTES
  • Fashion & Leather goods

Through a series of exclusive exhibitions and artistic exchanges around the world, Louis Vuitton continues its commitment to contemporary creation. This program translates a strong ambition: develop cultural initiatives with an international scope and reach an ever-broader audience.     

Wilhelm Sasnal’s exhibition “Grey Eyes” is presented at the Espace Louis Vuitton München until September 12, 2026. Since the 1990s, Wilhelm Sasnal has developed a body of work that questions our relationship to images, history and memory. His practice also spans drawing and film, with a close attention to images that shape everyday life. A recurring motif of the eye invites a reflection on seeing a world saturated with images.  The exhibition prompts the simple question of what it means to see without offering a fixed answer, but rather opening space for different perceptions.  

The Espace Louis Vuitton Beijing presents the “Dazzling Trilogy” exhibition by French artist Jean-Michel Othoniel. Through this exhibition, the artist reveals a universe in which glass becomes a language of light and emotion. Since turning to this materialin 1996, Jean-Michel Othoniel has explored the fragility of moments, upheavals, accidents, ruptures, and unforeseen transformations. His works emerge from the encounter between the artist’s sensibility and chance, in the search for a suspendedspace, a bubble, a silent refuge where the viewer can form an intimate connection with the work.     

At the Drawing Festival in Arles, drawing becomes a way of seeing the world. For the fourth consecutive year, Louis Vuitton returns to this emblematic city and unveils three titles from the Travel Book collection — Rome by Miles Hyman, Australia by Gabriella Giandelli, as well as a new edition, Berlin by Miroslav Sekulić-Struja. With this presence at the festival, the Maison celebrates the expressive power of drawing, one of the earliest artistic practices and a universal language, while reaffirming its connection to contemporary creation and travel. 

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