WWD Digital Daily

Loewe Revamps Tokyo Boutique

Jonathan Anderson filled the Omotesando store with handpicked art and furniture to celebrate the brand's 50th anniversar­y in Japan.

- BY RHONDA RICHFORD

To celebrate the 50th anniversar­y of its arrival in Japan, Loewe will unveil on Saturday a grand revamp of its Omotesando store in Tokyo, filled with light, art and touches of nature.

Works from Pablo Picasso and Anthea Hamilton were selected by creative

director Jonathan Anderson for the space, as well as Japanese botanical artist Tsubaki and bamboo artist Tanabe Chikuunsai.

“This store is all about connecting with nature; I love the metallic silver tiles of the facade and wanted them to reflect the changing seasons of Tokyo,” Anderson told WWD.

The silver tiles he speaks of were handcrafte­d by Spanish artisans, in a nod to the house's Madrid roots.

They cover not only the façade but the interior as well, mirroring the famous tree-lined street outside and bouncing beams of sunlight inside.

The Omotesando store originally opened in 2004, and redesigned by Anderson in 2014.

It was the very first outpost of creative Anderson's Casa Loewe concept, in which the brand's stores were reimagined as the home of a collector, filled with art and objects interspers­ed among the brand's clothing and accessorie­s.

The Japanese aesthetic traveled, with touches such as Ikebana flower arrangemen­ts transporte­d to the LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton-owned brand's boutiques around the world.

Another decade on, it is reopening with three stories and 5,000-square-feet of floor space in warm wood and poured concrete floors with touches of arts and crafts as well as Georgian architectu­re in its grand staircase.

The art pieces read like a gallerist's dream. Hamilton's Giant Pumpkin No.7, originally produced for the brand's fall 2022 show will be on hand, alongside ceramics from Picasso, Bernard Leach and Lucie Rie.

Anderson handpicked the furniture pieces, too, featuring Gerrit Thomas Rietveld's Utrecht and Steltman chairs, Axel Vervoordt's floating stone table, George Nakashima's Conoid chair and Gaetano Pesce's Feltri chair. A Noguchi lamp also features.

Tsubaki created a botanical arrangemen­t with living hardwood and ferns to reflect an Oyama, or small mountain, while bamboo artist Tanabe Chikuunsai created a boat-shaped flower basket sculpture for the space, titled Funagata Hanakago Amatsukaze.

Loewe's collaborat­ion with Japanese studio Suna Fujita will be available in the store. The artistic duo behind the label, Shohei Fujita and Chisato Yamano, look to animals and childhood memories in their works, and created a holiday collection including knitwear, bags, sneakers, small leather goods and accessorie­s featuring hand-painted birds and bears.

They'll also open a specialty candy shop featuring the collab characters just for the holidays, with the pop-up next door to the main store open until Dec. 26.

Omotesando will be the first

Tokyo location of Loewe's new ReCraft concept, with an in-house artisan available to offer care and repair of the brand's leather goods.

The spring 2024 collection will prelaunch with the opening on Saturday, before rolling out worldwide on Nov. 16.

 ?? ?? The silver-tiled facade of Loewe's Omotesando, Tokyo, store.
The silver-tiled facade of Loewe's Omotesando, Tokyo, store.
 ?? ?? Anthea Hamilton's Giant Pumpkin No. 7 features inside.
Anthea Hamilton's Giant Pumpkin No. 7 features inside.

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