In the hauntingly majestic Palais des Papes, Nicolas Ghesquière conjured a Louis Vuitton Cruise 2026 collection that bridged the medieval and the futuristic. With cinematic silhouettes, divine craftsmanship, and a front row just as starry as the skies above Avignon, the show transformed history into high fashion.
A return to the sacred stage
When Nicolas Ghesquière first visited the Palais des Papes in the year 2000, he was a curious observer drawn to its gothic grandeur and mystical resonance. Twenty-five years later, he returned to the same medieval fortress not as a visitor, but as the creative force behind one of Louis Vuitton’s most ambitious shows to date. In this historic setting, the Cruise 2026 collection unfolded like a mythic ritual—where architecture, memory, and fashion collided in sublime harmony.
The Palais, once the seat of Western Christendom, served as both muse and metaphor. Its towering arches and shadowed stonework gave the collection a heightened sense of drama, and it was clear from the opening looks that this was not merely a runway—it was a site of transformation. Ghesquière chose his setting wisely: the past wasn’t just a backdrop, it was a living presence, animating every garment with narrative depth.
Medieval meets modern in an epic fusion
The Cruise 2026 collection was a richly layered symphony of references—part illuminated manuscript, part glam rock opera. Ghesquière pulled from history with scholarly precision and theatrical flair, borrowing motifs from Arthurian legend, gothic armor, and liturgical dress. Yet nothing about it felt like costume. Each piece was a collision of old-world opulence and postmodern cool.
Gowns of sheer fabric danced between innocence and provocation, while asymmetrical cutouts hinted at contemporary sensuality. Leather, mesh, and chains became sculptural elements, forming what resembled futuristic armor. Sequin-dusted tunics shimmered under cathedral lighting, and draped silhouettes gave off an almost priestly solemnity, interrupted by glimmers of rebellion—zippers, studs, bejeweled combat boots.
Ghesquière’s genius lies in this ability to hybridize eras and genres, making garments that evoke myth and technology in a single glance. The result was a wardrobe for a modern Joan of Arc—powerful, mysterious, and undeniably stylish.
A front row worthy of the fantasy
The spectacle didn’t end on the runway. The front row was a star-studded tableau of cultural tastemakers and fashion rebels, each adding a layer of contemporary relevance to Ghesquière’s medieval dream. Stray Kids’ Felix turned heads in a signature bleach-blonde mullet and a futuristic ensemble that felt lifted from a cyberpunk fable. Actor and musician Jaden Smith arrived in a trapper hat and layers that blurred the line between streetwear and armor.
Also present was filmmaker Ava DuVernay, known for her visionary storytelling, as well as internet personality Quenlin Blackwell, both adding generational diversity to a guest list that has come to define Louis Vuitton’s appeal—an inclusive yet elite constellation of modern creatives.
Their looks, like the collection itself, didn’t just reference style—they embodied it. In many ways, this front row felt like a casting call for a postmodern epic, where each guest could walk straight from the Palais into a Ghesquière-designed fantasy world.
A dramaturgy of the imagination
More than just a collection, the show was a piece of performative art—a kind of fashion liturgy where fabric replaced scripture, and every step down the runway felt like a ritual incantation. Ghesquière has long spoken about fashion as narrative, and in Avignon, he demonstrated that belief on a grand scale.
The Cruise 2026 collection didn’t ask for quiet admiration; it demanded total immersion. Watching it unfold inside the ancient walls felt like witnessing a scene from a future fantasy film, one where elegance and edge, devotion and desire, coexisted seamlessly. The show’s pacing, the ambient music, the mystical lighting—it all contributed to a theatrical experience far beyond traditional fashion presentations.
Louis Vuitton has never shied away from spectacle, but this show took things a step further. Here, Ghesquière was not just a designer, but a dramaturge—crafting a world where each garment was both a costume and a prophecy.
Past and future in alchemical balance
At the heart of the Cruise 2026 show was a deeper alchemy: the merging of the old world and the new, the sacred and the digital, the personal and the universal. Ghesquière’s ability to infuse garments with both gravitas and play is what continues to set him apart. In Avignon, he dressed his models as mythmakers, rebels, and dreamers—citizens of a realm where style is both shield and symbol.
As Louis Vuitton looks to the future of fashion, it’s clear that Ghesquière is interested not just in designing clothes, but in shaping legacies. Cruise 2026 offered a glimpse into what that legacy might look like: richly storied, unapologetically bold, and always a few steps ahead of its time.