logo
Grand Palais to host exhibition dedicated to the work of Virgil Abloh

Grand Palais to host exhibition dedicated to the work of Virgil Abloh

Fashion United18-07-2025
Virgil Abloh: The Codes, the first major European exhibition dedicated to the work of Virgil Abloh (1980 - 2021), will be presented at the Grand Palais from September 30 (his birthday) to October 10, 2025.
The exhibition will explore nearly two decades of Abloh's multidisciplinary output through 20,000 archive items. It brings together hundreds of objects, prototypes, sketches and images from Abloh's career, as well as pieces from his personal collections and library.
The Codes also highlights Abloh's collaborations with several artists, designers and athletes.
'This exhibition is just the beginning of our work to share Virgil's legacy and principles with the creative community and the world,' Shannon Abloh, the late designer's wife and also chief executive officer of Virgil Abloh Securities, founder and chairwoman of the board of the Virgil Abloh Foundation, and president of Virgil Abloh Archive, said in a statement.
Abloh continued: 'Sharing his personal collection, unfinished projects and magnum opuses with the public is a monumental way to celebrate Virgil's legacy and his commitment to making information accessible and collaborative. Through the Archive, Virgil will remain a source of inspiration and a beacon of creative knowledge.'
Curated by Chloé Sultan and Mahfuz Sultan, the exhibition is an expanded edition of the 2022 exhibition Virgil Abloh: The Codes. It traces how his signature design principles – his 'codes' – are found in his work across garments, footwear, architecture, music, advertising and more, unifying a practice that spans multiple disciplines. This article was translated to English using an AI tool.
FashionUnited uses AI language tools to speed up translating (news) articles and proofread the translations to improve the end result. This saves our human journalists time they can spend doing research and writing original articles. Articles translated with the help of AI are checked and edited by a human desk editor prior to going online. If you have questions or comments about this process email us at info@fashionunited.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I'm talking to two important Scottish artists today – here's why
I'm talking to two important Scottish artists today – here's why

The National

time3 hours ago

  • The National

I'm talking to two important Scottish artists today – here's why

The events of the world today make this more urgent than ever. I've probably quoted before in these columns the lines given to me by Sandy Moffat which formed the closing words of a speech by the distinguished German musicologist Hans Heinrich Eggebrecht, delivered at a symposium held in May 1995 in the Hochschule der Kunste. They bear repeating. The conference was entitled May '45 – Remembrance and the Future – On the Representation of the Non-Representable in the Arts. Here's how Sandy introduced the context: 'The terms of the symposium were set out as follows: 'In a world plagued by social and ethnic conflict, by war and terrorism, schools of art and design and schools of music are confronted with the challenge to make a contribution toward peace among nations, not only through the work they each carry out in the fields of the arts and education, but also through international co-operation'. 'All of the speakers – from Russia, France, the Czech Republic, Hungary, the United Kingdom, the United States, Israel, Poland, Latvia, Estonia – offered outstanding papers. 'Some were moving, others gripping and some electrifying, especially On the Relationship of Music to Memory, which Eggenbrecht started thinking about on May 8, 1945, as he lay wounded in a prisoner of war camp, and most especially his closing words. And these are Eggebrecht's closing words: 'Compose, play, teach and contemplate music as devotedly as ever, but in the knowledge that war and Auschwitz did and do exist; and in the knowledge that nothing is more vital than art for the deepening, the honing, the sensitising of our awareness; but also in the knowledge that music can be ambiguous, that it can – yes, even the music of Beethoven, Liszt, and Bruckner – be used in the service of totalitarianism, war, genocide. 'Therefore, for all your devotion to art, do not lose sight of that which is the basis of everything: experience, which carrying with it as it does the consciousness of war and Auschwitz can be the defining authority for the active rejection of standardisation, intolerance and totalitarianism.' Now, here's the question. Can you show me a minister for the arts in ANY European country who would endorse that? When Sandy, Ruth Nicol and I foregather this afternoon, that will be our opening text. Do come if you can. But if you can't, another event will soon be taking place where such concerns will also be foregrounded. Scotland in Europe and the Scottish Centre for Geopoetics are organising a Festival of Hope at GalGael, 15 Fairley Street, Govan this coming Saturday to mark almost two years since the death of the poet Kenneth White. Alistair McIntosh and Norman Bissell will speak about him and show an excerpt from their film Expressing the Earth. There will be some traditional music, workshops and a stall. What connects these two events is the recognition that all the arts constitute the most vital component of human life – or let me put it this way, the arts are 'human existence come to life'. All the arts – literature and poetry, painting and sculpture, music of all kinds, architecture, and how we use the adult languages of communication to engage with the priorities of the arts – must be at the forefront of our concerns in an era where lies, misinformation, misdirection, confusion and disillusionment seem to be the steady practice of almost all mass media and almost all public-facing politicians and the faceless big business international corporations behind them. The situation is as dreadful today as it has ever been in terms of media saturation. The evidence of genocide, bloodshed, violence and power we can see and read about every day from the uncomfortable securities of our living rooms – safe for the time being perhaps – is merely evidence of how far so many in power have departed from such priorities. The arts are so important in this context because they connect humanity to reality immediately and in ways that nothing else can do. We can remind ourselves of those priorities and this connection with a poem by Kenneth White himself, A High Blue Day on Scalpay. Here it is, from his collection Open World, Collected Poems 1960-2000 (Polygon): this is the summit of contemplation, and no art can touch it blue, so blue, the far-out archipelago and the sea shimmering, shimmering no art can touch it, the mind can only try to become attuned to it to become quiet and space itself out, to become open and still, unworlded knowing itself in the diamond country, in the ultimate unlettered light. He says, 'no art can touch it' and repeats the phrase, and speaks of 'unlettered light' but this is a poem, letters are its matter, words are its medium, poetic form is its means of conveyance, and the 'touching' is right there on the page, between the words as we read them and the imagination realising the 'high clear day', which exists only in nature, in reality. By contrast, TV, film, radio, politicians' speeches, can sometimes evoke, occasionally illustrate or perhaps just refer to this connection but none of them can present it with the immediacy of a poem or a painting or a piece of music. Another way of approaching Kenneth White and the virtues of the arts is through the idea of 'geopoetics' which is associated with him so closely. Geopoetics in this understanding is a sensitivity, physical, spiritual and intellectual, outwardly enquiring. It isn't so far away from psychogeography, which is an understanding in the perceiving person, the singular mind at work. There are numerous books and essays and a long tradition of ecological thinking about and within literature and the arts. Louisa Gairn's book Ecology and Modern Scottish Literature (2008) and Monika Szuba's books, The Poetics of Space and Place in Scottish [[Literature]] and Contemporary Scottish Poetry and the Natural World, discussing poets such as John Burnside, Kathleen Jamie, Robin Robertson and Kenneth White, are especially pertinent. Both were published in 2019. One of the closest readings of Kenneth White in the totality of his achievement and the extension of his legacy, is Norman Bissell's Living on an Island: Expressing the Earth (2024). This is an extraordinary compendium, an autobiographical account of Norman's accommodation with the ecology of his own experience of life on a small island, as he has lived on Luing in the Slate Islands for many years. The book delivers a growing understanding of a community of care and concern, but also an intellectual enquiry into the term 'geopoetics' itself: A way of living in what the American poet Charles Olson called a 'human universe' – an earth of actual value. But it's more than that. It's a meticulous literary exploration of the author's grateful relationship with Kenneth White, taking into full account White's long residence in Brittany and his experiences as a world-traveller, geographically and spiritually, an intellectual nomad, yet a poet grounded in glancing but profound realities, shorelines of understanding, coastal territories, tidal places. Bissell tells his own story of meeting White and then weaves into it their parting company and his search for, and reconnecting with White, years later. He includes a full exposition of White's writing, documenting his own growing comprehension of an earth increasingly under threat in a climate of political encroachment. Bissell deftly and fairly indicates some of White's own limitations as well as summarising the sometimes harsh and reflexive criticisms White has come in for. The book is a quest narrative. Bissell takes us into his confidence, and locates White, and himself, in the company of a wide range of other writers, ecologists and artists whose priorities are shared, sometimes exchanged and largely endorsed, including Nan Shepherd, Jessie Kesson, Katharine Stewart, Rachel Carson and Joan Eardley. His argument is that these women were in pursuit of similar or related and overlapping realisations in their respective works. White's writing may be masculinist in various obvious ways, but his concerns are not a male prerogative. In fact, one might argue, feminine principles are deeply ingrained in them, no matter how macho, or even, one might say, misogynist, he can sometimes be in his writings. Ultimately, Bissell's book is an affirmation of a world where truths can be accurately valued. And it's a moving history of a friendship. Here's his poem, Elegy for KW: It's hard to take in that he's gone the man who was such a big part of my life and thoughts for almost sixty years. I think back to those Jargon Group days when he opened my mind to so many ideas and more than ideas to the joy of life itself and how after we went our separate ways he to pursue a cultural revolution I to foment a social revolution I tracked him down at the Sorbonne and en Bretagne after twenty years. Reading his work this past year when writing my book about geopoetics I felt I got to know him even better and to tell my truth about how I found him. His books will live on to influence even more seekers of truth and to spread the good news of the creative expression of the Earth. That afternoon when I heard of his passing we walked along the shore and out in the bay the rigging on a white schooner clanged a death knell for the life of Kenneth White. And this is reminding me of those wonderful lines of Charles Olson: 'There are no hierarchies, no infinite, no such many as mass, there are only / eyes in all heads, / to be looked out of' – which when I think of it now extends my own remit all the way around the world to New Zealand, where I spent 14 years of my own life, and I'm remembering the first book of my friend the artist and poet Gregory O'Brien, entitled, Location of the Least Person (1987). And this now draws me to my last point here about Kenneth White's legacy, that it stands as a permanent reminder and encouragement, so that we know that the world is in need, even of us, however damned and marginal we might seem to be. The legacy of White's work may not directly be the spread or escalation of 'geopoetics'. The poetic initiatives already being undertaken in the condition of global climate catastrophe have their own dynamics, and as Norman Bissell explains in his book, White described Geopoetics, but did not define or originate its meaning or purpose. Its practise predates him, overlaps with his contemporaries, and goes far beyond without reference to him. I'll come back to it. The legacy of his writing lies in the threefold identification of its genres: poetry, fictionalised travel journals, and skipping, skimming philosophical essays, referencing rich sources. Each genre is written lightly, some might say, superficially, glancing at great depths below, indicating other writers of far more difficulty, challenge and provocation, but embodying a spirit of enquiry and observation. He can be flat-footed, but never very ponderous. He can risk banality, pretentiousness and stridency, but is not over-wrought with anxiety or gestural ennui. What seems like innocence can be insouciance. This means that a sober critical account of his poetry is yet to be made. As Guy Davenport says in an essay on Ronald Johnson, 'A poem as it is generally understood is a metrical composition either lyric, dramatic, or pensive made by a poet whose spiritual dominion flows through his words like the wind through the leaves or the lark's song through twilight.' White's actual practice doesn't quite match that conventional romanticism. But if his legacy is a prioritisation of open enquiry, opposed to the closed mind of predestined conclusions, and that's no bad thing to be remembered for, and for future generations to take forward. And it's a lasting reminder that what always matters most is the reality all our arts are founded upon, draw themselves from, and, yes, can take forward – even against all the odds, vast as they seem at present.

Sugababes ‘honoured' to share same stage as Mariah Carey after headlining Pride
Sugababes ‘honoured' to share same stage as Mariah Carey after headlining Pride

Leader Live

time6 hours ago

  • Leader Live

Sugababes ‘honoured' to share same stage as Mariah Carey after headlining Pride

On Sunday, the English girl group closed the weekend of celebrations in Preston Park with a show full of throwbacks and synchronised dance moves. After taking to the stage, they said 'last night headlining was Mariah' before adding: 'It's a complete honour to be on the same stage.' Just like Carey on Saturday, the group told the audience that the LGBT+ community has always been the 'core' of their fanbase. Mutya Buena, Keisha Buchanan and Siobhan Donaghy had the whole crowd bouncing as they closed the show with About You Now, despite some microphone issues. Buena seemed to struggle as she sang the introduction, with her vocals fading out, but the trio recovered well, bringing the curtain down on this year's Preston Park performances. The group referenced their 'long journey', having started when they were around 12 years old in 1998 before splitting and then regaining the name Sugababes in 2019. Images of each of them as kids flickered up on screen accompanied by a voiceover describing their story so far. 'We found our way back to each other,' Buchanan said. They almost forgot to sing their 2025 single Shook, starting the intro for the next song before doubling back, admitting they are 'not used' to having it in the set. According to the BBC, roughly 300,000 people were in Brighton over the weekend. Many of the acts across the weekend have made sure to remind their audience that Pride started as protest, with some making reference to Gaza and also transgender rights being rolled back in the UK. Drag queen Tayris Mongardi, who performed at Brighton Pride this weekend, told the PA news agency that Pride is about being 'present and vocal' while also having a 'good bloody time'. She said that while living and working in the UK is 'privileged' compared to other countries, it is still important to remember 'what we're fighting for'. The performer said: 'Look, we're so blessed in so many ways to have the privileges we do here versus other countries and whatnot but really like it is a protest and you do have to remember not only its roots and where it's come from but what we're fighting for. 'Yes I might be queer and of colour but I have so many trans brothers and sisters, siblings and we're watching their rights actually being taken away – it's about being present, being vocal.' Ms Mongardi has performed at every Brighton Pride since 2017, excluding the pandemic year, and now feels like she is 'part of the furniture' at the event, and said that Pride is about community. She added: 'Protect trans lives, protect black lives, and have a good bloody time you know, we're all fighting, we're all trying to get through the place but have a good time while you're doing it right?'

Sugababes ‘honoured' to share same stage as Mariah Carey after headlining Pride
Sugababes ‘honoured' to share same stage as Mariah Carey after headlining Pride

North Wales Chronicle

time7 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Sugababes ‘honoured' to share same stage as Mariah Carey after headlining Pride

On Sunday, the English girl group closed the weekend of celebrations in Preston Park with a show full of throwbacks and synchronised dance moves. After taking to the stage, they said 'last night headlining was Mariah' before adding: 'It's a complete honour to be on the same stage.' Just like Carey on Saturday, the group told the audience that the LGBT+ community has always been the 'core' of their fanbase. Mutya Buena, Keisha Buchanan and Siobhan Donaghy had the whole crowd bouncing as they closed the show with About You Now, despite some microphone issues. Buena seemed to struggle as she sang the introduction, with her vocals fading out, but the trio recovered well, bringing the curtain down on this year's Preston Park performances. The group referenced their 'long journey', having started when they were around 12 years old in 1998 before splitting and then regaining the name Sugababes in 2019. Images of each of them as kids flickered up on screen accompanied by a voiceover describing their story so far. 'We found our way back to each other,' Buchanan said. They almost forgot to sing their 2025 single Shook, starting the intro for the next song before doubling back, admitting they are 'not used' to having it in the set. According to the BBC, roughly 300,000 people were in Brighton over the weekend. Many of the acts across the weekend have made sure to remind their audience that Pride started as protest, with some making reference to Gaza and also transgender rights being rolled back in the UK. Drag queen Tayris Mongardi, who performed at Brighton Pride this weekend, told the PA news agency that Pride is about being 'present and vocal' while also having a 'good bloody time'. She said that while living and working in the UK is 'privileged' compared to other countries, it is still important to remember 'what we're fighting for'. The performer said: 'Look, we're so blessed in so many ways to have the privileges we do here versus other countries and whatnot but really like it is a protest and you do have to remember not only its roots and where it's come from but what we're fighting for. 'Yes I might be queer and of colour but I have so many trans brothers and sisters, siblings and we're watching their rights actually being taken away – it's about being present, being vocal.' Ms Mongardi has performed at every Brighton Pride since 2017, excluding the pandemic year, and now feels like she is 'part of the furniture' at the event, and said that Pride is about community. She added: 'Protect trans lives, protect black lives, and have a good bloody time you know, we're all fighting, we're all trying to get through the place but have a good time while you're doing it right?'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store