April 28, 2026

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When what we see has never quite told the whole truth Grey Eyes, the latest exhibition by Wilhelm Sasnal, invites us to question vision, memory, and a world saturated with images we may never have truly seen. #legendFashion by Manit Maneephantakun @kaimanit takes you into this quietly powerful new body of work.

In a world where images move faster than thought, and our eyes are trained to “see” before they are allowed to “understand,” the arrival of Grey Eyes at Espace Louis Vuitton München is more than just another entry on the cultural calendar. It is, instead, a pause, a moment that gently insists we reconsider what it actually means to look.

On the evening of its opening, Munich seemed to echo the tone of the exhibition itself. Grey, not quite light, not entirely shadow, hung in the air as both presence and absence. Inside the upper floor of the Louis Vuitton Maison on Maximilianstraße, the exhibition unfolds not with spectacle, but with restraint. It does not demand attention; it draws you in through its quiet incompleteness, its ambiguity, and a lingering sense of something unresolved.

Presented under the Fondation Louis Vuitton’s Hors-les-murs programme, which brings works from its collection to cities across the world, from Tokyo and Venice to Seoul and Osaka, this exhibition not only marks the 20th anniversary of the Espaces Louis Vuitton and the 10th anniversary of the programme, but also reinforces the brand’s evolving role. Louis Vuitton is no longer simply shaping images, it is creating space for cultural dialogue. A dialogue that does not seek answers, but values the act of questioning.

Sasnal, the Polish artist whose practice was shaped in the aftermath of post–Cold War Europe, has never been interested in telling complete stories. Instead, he fragments them. Drawing from press photography, film stills, and the quiet visuals of everyday life, he reworks these images, cropping, simplifying, blurring, until they exist in a suspended state. Somewhere between memory and forgetting, between fact and interpretation.

In one room, a portrait feels eerily familiar, yet refuses to reveal a clear identity. The eyes, once the focal point of connection, fade into shadow, layered in muted greys like a fog that obscures rather than clarifies. In another, a seemingly calm landscape carries an undercurrent of tension. Perhaps it is history left unspoken, or memory that resists resolution.

Grey Eyes, then, is not merely a title, it is a condition of seeing. Eyes that are tired. Eyes that turn away. Or eyes that remain open, yet fail to truly perceive.

What makes this particularly compelling is its quiet opposition to the language of fashion itself. Where fashion often celebrates clarity, perfection, and the meticulously constructed image, Sasnal does the opposite. He embraces incompleteness. He leaves space. And in doing so, he allows the viewer to become part of the work, to fill in meaning through personal experience.

In this sense, his work resonates with a broader shift within luxury today. A movement away from simply presenting images, toward questioning them.

Perhaps this is a new kind of luxury, not found in what is seen, but in how we choose to see.

And as one steps out of the exhibition, a feeling lingers. Not clarity, but a question. In a world flooded with endless images, have we ever truly seen anything at all? Or have we only believed that we have?

Grey Eyes is on view from April 24 to September 9 at Espace Louis Vuitton München, a space where fashion, art, and memory converge in a quiet, yet deeply resonant dialogue.

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