Espace Louis Vuitton Tokyo

  • Art
  • Omotesando
  1. Espace Louis Vuitton Tokyo
    (c)Louis Vuitton / Daici AnoEspace Louis Vuitton Tokyo
  2. Espace Louis Vuitton Tokyo
    (c)Louis Vuitton / Daici Ano
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Time Out says

Following the example of Champs-Elysées Maison in Paris, Louis Vuitton has transformed the seventh floor of its Jun Aoki-designed Omotesando store into an art gallery in 2011. The French culture and art organisation Fondation Louis Vuitton curates contemporary works of art for its Hors-les-murs programme, which is hosted at this Tokyo venue as well as in other international locations including Munich, Venice and Beijing. Since opening, Espace Louis Vuitton Tokyo has held solo exhibitions by Jesus Rafael Soto and Christian Boltanski, as well as group shows featuring work by artists from Finland, India and Japan.

Details

Address:
7F Louis Vuitton Omotesando, 5-7-5 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku
Tokyo
Transport:
Omotesando Station, Meiji-Jingumae Station
Price:
Free
Opening hours:
12noon-8pm daily

What’s on

Mark Leckey: Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore feat. Big Red Soundsystem

British-born artist Mark Leckey is a product of the UK’s ever-vibrant pop culture, and through diverse mediums he confronts youth, dance music, nostalgia, social class and history from an often countercultural perspective. The subcultural edge of his work – which encompasses film, sound, sculpture, performance, collage and more – additionally takes on a gritty incongruousness when enjoyed at Louis Vuitton’s sleek Omotesando exhibition space. The French luxury house here presents two Leckey works from its collection. 'Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore feat. Big Red Soundsystem' (1999-2003-2010) is a film that, through a mash-up of archive footage, vividly traces the development of the UK’s underground dance music scene from 1970s disco through to the ’90s rave scene. 2013’s 'Felix the Cat', meanwhile, is a giant inflatable rendering of the cartoon cat that Leckey considers a pioneer of the digital age. Almost a century ago, this feline character was one of the first subjects to be transmitted as a TV signal. Text by Darren Gore

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