Fashion
Colette concept store set for a temporary return at the Grand Palais
Published
September 25, 2025
Even a fleeting return by Colette is enough to make it an event in its own right. Eight years after its closure, the cult Parisian concept store will spring back to life for the exhibition “Virgil Abloh: The Codes” at the Grand Palais, running from September 30 to October 9. More than a tribute to the late designer, this living boutique, conceived by The Virgil Abloh Archive, offers an opportunity to reinterpret the unique spirit of colette, a laboratory where fashion met art, music and design.
Founded in 1997 by Colette Rousseaux, the store helped shape a new way of consuming and thinking about fashion, before closing its doors in 2017. The revival is therefore strategic: it is not only about celebrating Virgil Abloh, whom the boutique championed from his earliest T-shirts, but about rekindling a vision of retail as a cultural space, where collaboration and creativity take precedence over the simple act of purchase.
On the programme: a selection of exclusive and iconic pieces, including a reissue from the Virgil Abloh x Braun collaboration featuring the BC02 alarm clock, and a French translation of the collection Abloh-isms. Visitors can also discover creations by Babylon, Bstroy, Cactus Plant Flea Market, Futura Laboratories, L’Art de l’Automobile, Travis Scott, and many others.
“Virgil had a deep admiration for Colette and firmly believed in the use of commercial spaces as platforms for cultural expression,” recalled Shannon Abloh, CEO of Virgil Abloh Securities. Alongside Andelman, co-founder and keeper of Colette’s legacy, she is orchestrating a space that is not just a tribute, but an extension of this pioneering vision.
By bringing Colette back into the spotlight, The Virgil Abloh Archive goes beyond a simple retrospective to pose a broader question: what does a retail space mean today when it becomes an incubator for ideas, encounters and cultural narratives?
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