"This piece really links our brand's history to design work," says Nathalie Fremon, senior vice president of architecture and home collections at Louis Vuitton, speaking of the original red-and-black dressing table. "Then, it didn't look like anything you'd ever seen. But today it fits perfectly into the interiors of our time."
The 2026 edition signals a more structural shift through collaborations with figures such as Rem Koolhaas and David Gianotten, positioning the Salone as an evolving cultural infrastructure rather than a conventional trade fair.