Fashion
Louis Vuitton Foundation to stage major Calder retrospective
Published
December 16, 2025
The Fondation Louis Vuitton will stage a novel Alexander Calder centennial retrospective in 2026, the latest in a series by the Paris art institute focused on leading artists of 20th and 21st centuries.
Previous monographic exhibitions at the Fondation Louis Vuitton have included Jean-Michel Basquiat, Joan Mitchell, Charlotte Perriand, Mark Rothko, David Hockney, and Gerhard Richter, its current show.
For Calder, a legendary artist known for his giant mobiles, sprawling mechanical kinetic sculptures moved by power and wind, the foundation will dedicate the entirety of its show space. And also, for the first time, the adjacent lawn, in a dialogue between Calder’s volumes, planes, and movements and those of the foundation’s famous sailboat silhouette.
The announcement by the Fondation Louis Vuitton on Tuesday, comes 11 days after the death of Frank Gehry, the master architect who designed its building. The art show will celebrate the centenary of Alexander Calder’s arrival in France in 1926 and the 50th anniversary of his death with a retrospective covering all aspects of his work. The son and grandson of two sculptors, Calder was born in Philadelphia in 1898 and died in New York in 1976.
Entitled ‘Calder: Rêver en équilibre,’ or ‘Calder: Dreaming in Balance,’ the exhibition covers half a century of creation, from the late 1920s and the first performances of the Calder Circus that captivated the Parisian avant-garde, to his monumental sculptures that redefined the idea of public art in the 1960s and 1970s.
The exhibition, one of the most important to date devoted to Calder, was conceived in close collaboration with the Calder Foundation, which is the main lender. It will also benefit from loans from international institutions and leading private collectors, bringing together nearly 300 works: mobiles and stabiles- to borrow Calder’s terminology for kinetic and static abstractions- as well as wire portraits, wooden sculptures, paintings, drawings, and even jewellery.
Works by his friends Jean Arp, Barbara Hepworth, Jean Hélion, and Piet Mondrian, as well as Paul Klee and Pablo Picasso, help to situate Calder’s radical inventiveness within the avant-garde movement. Thirty-four photographs taken by some of the most important photographers of the 20th century (Henri Cartier-Bresson, André Kertész, Gordon Parks, Man Ray, Irving Penn, and Agnès Varda) show an artist walking the tightrope between art and life.
After studying at the Art Students League in New York, Calder moved to Paris in 1926. In the Montparnasse district, the artist quickly became part of what was then the world’s leading artistic centre. There he presented unique forms, figurative and refined wire sculptures that attracted critical acclaim, and a miniature circus. Thanks to an exceptional loan from the Whitney Museum of American Art, the first in 15 years, Calder’s Circus is returning to Paris, the city where it was created. At the centre of this new kind of show, Calder manipulates acrobats, clowns, and miniature horsemen. Fernand Léger, Jean Hélion, Le Corbusier, Jean Arp, Joan Miró, and Piet Mondrian are among his spectators.
Calder’s visit to Mondrian’s studio in 1930 marked the abstract turning point in his work, first in painting, then in sculpture. Marcel Duchamp proposed the name “Mobiles” for the abstract and kinetic compositions that the artist presented in 1932 at the Galerie Vignon in Paris. Initially driven mechanically, then moved by slight breezes, these mobiles borrowed “their life from the vague life of the atmosphere,” as Jean-Paul Sartre wrote in 1946.
Calder returned to France after WW2 and set up a studio in the hamlet of Saché, in the Loire Valley in 1953. One of his sculptures still stands in the village’s square.
Like his swaying interconnected mobile art, the exhibition is a joint curation that includes input from Suzanne Pagé, artistic director of the Fondation Louis Vuitton; guest curators Dieter Buchhart and Anna Karina Hofbauer, assisted by Valentin Neuroth and Claire Deuticke; and Olivier Michelon, associate curator, assisted by Léna Lévy.
Copyright © 2025 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
Fashion
LVMH CEO Arnault: Ask me again in 10 years about succession plans
By
Reuters
Published
December 17, 2025
LVMH CEO Bernard Arnault said he was hoping he would be able to make another ten years when asked about his succession plans for the world’s biggest luxury group.
“Talk to me again in 10 years, I can give you a more precise answer,” Arnault, 76, told broadcaster CNBC in an interview, referring to his latest mandate extension, approved by shareholders earlier this year.
“I hope … that I will make these 10 years,” he said.
Commenting on the role of his five children at the family-controlled luxury giant, Arnault gave little insight on who could take over the helm.
“For getting responsibility, they have to merit the responsibility and to prove they can do it,” Arnault said.
© Thomson Reuters 2025 All rights reserved.
Fashion
Nextil strengthens its US presence with the acquisition of a 51% stake in medical textile specialist Isavela
By
Europa Press
Published
December 17, 2025
Nextil has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the shareholders of Texas-based US company Isavela, with a view to acquiring a 51% majority stake in the company.
As reported by the company in a statement to the Spanish National Securities Market Commission (CNMV) on Wednesday, Isavela specialises in the design, manufacture, and marketing of compression and post-operative garments for the medical sector, operating in the high value-added “medical garments” segment.
Specifically, the company develops textile solutions that require premium elastic fabrics, high-quality standards, traceability and regulatory compliance, as well as close collaboration with hospitals, clinics and healthcare professionals, mainly in the US.
At present, Isavela generates recurring revenues of more than 10 million dollars (8.6 million euros), with EBITDA of over 3 million dollars (2.6 million euros), reflecting a specialised, profitable business model with high recurrence.
Thus, the potential integration of Isavela would enable Nextil to complete the value chain in the medical segment, from fabric development through to the finished garment, drawing on its international industrial platform and its expertise in management, innovation and sustainability.
Following the transaction, Isavela will continue to operate independently under the leadership of its current executive team, maintaining its identity, culture, and specialisation, while benefiting from Nextil’s industrial, technological, and commercial support to accelerate its expansion in the United States and other international markets.
The agreement provides for a flexible payment structure, combining an initial cash payment and a deferred component, which may be settled in cash or in Nextil shares, at Nextil’s discretion. The MoU also includes a future option to acquire 100% of Isavela, within a timeframe agreed by the parties, with the aim of supporting the project’s growth and maximising joint value creation in the medium and long term.
Likewise, the agreement establishes a joint work period to carry out due diligence, draw up the business plan and negotiate the final agreements.
“Isavela is a company with an excellent position in the medical and post-operative sector, an exceptional team and a solid business model,” said Nextil Group, stressing that this agreement enables it to advance in a strategic segment, integrate the entire value chain and strengthen its presence in the US with a long-term vision, as it has “great ideas for product, market and design development.”
Furthermore, the company highlighted that this agreement forms part of Nextil’s strategic plan, which continues to actively analyse new opportunities for inorganic growth, especially in high value-added segments with strong potential for international expansion.
Lastly, the company stated that it will promptly inform the market of any relevant developments relating to this transaction and to the rest of the group’s strategic initiatives.
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Fashion
Jonathan Anderson rewires Dior for pre-fall 2026 collection
Published
December 17, 2025
Two months after unveiling his debut women’s collection for Dior with a horror movie, Jonathan Anderson has continued his reimagining of the house by rewiring multiple codes for its pre-fall 2026 collection.
Terming it “a wardrobe suited for many characters and occasions,” the Fall 2026 collection unveiled Wednesday certainly widens Dior’s range, even as it plays around with Dior classics.
Hence the Bar jacket is cropped or soft, and even enlarged into a coat. While pants are cut large, slouchy, and flopping around the feet; finished in multiple reverse pleats and made in silk denim.
Denim, lovingly worn and distressed, is the material used for elongated floor length skirts made with classic jean pockets. Paired with speckled charcoal cardigans, they will surely ignite a major trend.

Once again, the Northern Irish designer favours big bold bows, seen in silk chemises with cuffs extending well beyond the fingertips.
“The power of fashion to rewire the everyday is affirmed, at once softly and boldly,” insists Dior in its release.
Unveiled in a photo shoot beneath Paris’ Pont Neuf, the collection will hit retail shelves in April 2026.

Anderson’s experiments in draping continue at pace. Rouching, looping, and adding huge side bows to buttinette moiré dresses or satin gowns. One dress in seaweed green is an updated version of the look Mia Goth wore to the Governor’s Ball in Los Angeles recently. It can now be seen at La Galerie Dior, the brand’s in-house museum beside its Avenue Montaigne flagship. Placed beside diaphanous looks for Dior designed by Jonathan and worn by the likes of Catherine O’Hara and Jisoo.
The new Dior couturier certainly does not lack courage and chutzpah when it comes to draping, even if his experiments at the French house still feel like a work in progress.

In fact, what often works best pre-fall are the simplest pieces: from the rather divine flared skirt and tank combined with a matte green silk blouse to the black silk culottes paired with an ecru blouse, finished with a looped neckline from which hangs a golden tassel pendant. The epitome of contemporary chic and cool.
In terms of accessories, pre-fall appeared packed with winners, from the Dior Cigale in pale gold crocodile to Dior Crunchy in blue fabric. Open toe pumps, loafers, or mules often featuring complimentary C and D buckles on each side, all had poise and pizzazz. Clever must-haves for sure.

Everything in pre-fall was designed to “allow a number of attitudes, prolonging the idea of dressing to become a character of one’s own design,” the house concluded. How true.
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