Louis Vuitton at Serbelloni

- Louis Vuitton opened an immersive display at Milan’s Palazzo Serbelloni blending Objets Nomades and heritage pieces. - The installation frames LV objects within a Parisian Art Deco setting as part of Milan Design Week. - Coverage positions the project as a fashion-meets-design narrative during Salone, showing houses using immersive storytelling (us.fashionnetwork.com).

Louis Vuitton has turned Milan’s Palazzo Serbelloni into an Art Deco stage set for its latest Objets Nomades presentation during Milan Design Week 2026. (ww.fashionnetwork.com) The installation opened on April 21 and runs through April 26, spreading across the courtyard and piano nobile of the 18th-century palace with free public admission. (ww.fashionnetwork.com) (www.zoemagazine.net) Louis Vuitton said the display centers on a tribute to Pierre Legrain, the French Art Deco designer whose geometric forms and material contrasts shaped the rooms and several new pieces. (us.louisvuitton.com) (ww.fashionnetwork.com) Objets Nomades is Louis Vuitton’s collectible furniture line, launched in 2012, in which invited designers make limited-edition chairs, tables, screens and other domestic objects. (us.louisvuitton.com) At Serbelloni, those contemporary pieces were shown beside archival trunks and travel objects, tying the home collection back to the house’s 19th-century luggage business. (theimpression.com) (ww.fashionnetwork.com) The 2026 edition also folded in Louis Vuitton’s broader Home universe, including textiles, tableware and decorative objects, instead of treating furniture as a separate category. (us.louisvuitton.com) (theimpression.com) That approach fits the way luxury brands now use Salone del Mobile and the wider Milan Design Week calendar: not only to sell products, but to build rooms, atmospheres and historical narratives around them. (ww.fashionnetwork.com) (musemagazine.it) Louis Vuitton has been showing at Palazzo Serbelloni for several years, and this year’s presentation again used the palace’s ceremonial rooms to frame design as part of the brand’s fashion-and-travel identity. (ww.fashionnetwork.com) (sidewalkhustle.com) The result is less a trade-fair booth than a branded interior, with Louis Vuitton using a Milan palace to present furniture, trunks and décor as one continuous story about how the house wants to live. (ww.fashionnetwork.com) (us.louisvuitton.com)

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