Louis Vuitton Spring Summer 2015 Campaign | SENATUS

ASIA'S PREMIER LUXURY & LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE

SENATUS.NET

Louis Vuitton Spring Summer 2015 Campaign
By Men's Journal Online | 6 January 2015

Nicolas Ghesquière tapped the same three marquee photographers — Juergen Teller, Bruce Weber and Annie Leibovitz — for his sophomore fashion campaign for Louis Vuitton and also brought actress Jennifer Connelly into the fold.

The spring ads, slated to break in a range of February magazines starting with U.K. titles, also reflect three different locales. Leibovitz took Danish model Freja Beha Erichsen to the top of three unfinished skyscrapers in Manhattan, offering sweeping views of Central Park and Midtown’s skyline, while Weber chose Miami — and black-and-white film — for Connelly, one of Ghesquière’s longtime heroines. Teller picked a Parisian townhouse as a backdrop for models Jean Campbell, Rianne Van Rompaey, Daphne Simons and Marte Mei van Haaster.

Under the title “Series 2,” the spreads often mingle images by different photographers, suggesting that fashion is an elastic subject, with each collection open to various interpretations. Ghesquière has said the triple-header campaigns are to address the “many facets of women.” His “Series 1” campaign won a British Fashion Award for best advertising campaign.

0 Photos | View Photos

Watches & Jewelry

Audemars Piguet House Macau - largest of its kind in Greater China

Fashion & Style

Louis Vuitton x Murakami collaboration returns in 2025

Watches & Jewelry

Blancpain presents Fifty Fathoms Bathyscaphe timepieces in Red Gold

Watches & Jewelry

TAG Heuer Carrera Chronograph Tourbillon x Senna - power meets precision

Watches & Jewelry

Hublot unveils the new Classic Fusion Chronograph Arturo Fuente King Gold

Watches & Jewelry

ZENITH releases first boutique-exclusive edition of the DEFY Skyline Chronograph

All Rights Reserved. SENATUS © 2024
 

SENATUS is a registered trademark of SENATUS PTE LTD. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or used otherwise, except as expressly permitted in writing by SENATUS.