How long will Virgil Abloh's legacy at Louis Vuitton last? «We will move on to the next phase» said CEO Michael Burke

Louis Vuitton's latest collection, unveiled at the Cour Carré in the Louvre, was created by the Prêt-à-Porter Homme Studio that Abloh had chosen and trained, and was all about tribute and remembrance. From Kendrick Lamar's homage, crowned with thorns made by Tiffany & Co., to the location that reproduced the circuit of a toy train, Virgil Abloh's legacy was not re-proposed with sad shadows of nostalgia, but in a fresh and jovial key in which the memory of the Chicago designer took on the hues of "the untainted vision of a child, not yet spoiled by social programming", to use his own words. Paper aeroplanes landed on a black suit, a coat decorated with the contents of a toolbox, a multicoloured flower monogram: Pindaric flights within juxtaposed codes. The collection condensed all the elements that have led the brand to become LVMH's flagship brand under Abloh, yet brought nothing new to the brand's imagery, with what was the fourth tribute collection in just eight months.

A change that seems closer than ever after Louis Vuitton CEO Michael Burke attended Martine Rose's SS23 show in London. An unusual event that neither the brand nor Rose have decided to comment on, thus not confirming the rumours but not denying them either, causing a flood of speculation among industry insiders. Burke himself had said in November that the fashion house was in no hurry to look for a replacement, also given the amount of ideas that the creative had left the brand, but after the last show it seems that the team is ready to start again: Burke said "we will move on to the next phase". In the meantime, we can only hope that this will happen quickly, while the same looping question resounds in our thoughts: what would Virgil have done?