Loewe and Mytheresa hosted a special cocktail hour and dinner on Wednesday night in New Canaan, Conn., at the Glass House, designed by architect Philip Johnson — a close collaborator and friend of the Josef and Anni Albers — to celebrate the Spanish luxury fashion house’s fall 2025 ready-to-wear collection.
Special guests, including Katy Hessel, Marcos Fecchino, Deon Hinton, Victoria Rogers, Danny Kaplan, Misha Kahn, Courtney Willis Blair, Rōze Traore and Xavier Donnelly, among others, enjoyed an intimate dinner by chefs Riad Nasr and Lee Hanson of New York City restaurants Frenchette, Le Rock and Le Veau D’Or.
Michael Kliger, Charlie Smith
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The Josef & Anni Albers Foundation served as a key collaborator for Loewe’s fall 2025 ready-to-wear collection, which debuted in an exhibition piece during Paris Fashion Week in March. Both artists, writers and teachers are credited for their expansive approach to color and textiles.
Anni Albers was one of the foremost textile designers of the 20th century, innovating single-weave designs and expanding the use of color into new materials, energizing fresh possibilities. Josef Albers, who began his career as an elementary school teacher, became a markedly influential art teacher in the 20th century, whose approach to art and designs in glass, woodworking, painting and printmaking are still taught to this day, per the Josef & Anni Albers Foundation’s official website.
Courtney Willis Blair
Madeleine Thomas/BFA.com
With the collaboration of the foundation, Jonathan Anderson crafted a “scrapbook of ideas,” per Miles Socha’s WWD review of the collection.
“Anderson’s inimitable design language and cultural intelligence informed every square inch of the sprawling display, in which giant tomatoes, an apple and a pumpkin by Anthea Hamilton brought a surreal touch to 17 opulent rooms of the palatial 18th-century mansion,” Socha wrote.
Philip Johnson’s Glass House.
Madeleine Thomas/BFA.com
Socha described how the collection was “skewed to sculptural designs: windblown peacoats in molded leather; a trapeze-shaped field jacket, and baseball T-shirts shaped like capes with their supersized raglan sleeves — and that was just the menswear.”
Anderson served as the creative director of Loewe from 2013 until 2025. In June, Dior confirmed that Anderson is the new couturier of the French luxury fashion house, designing for the women’s, men’s and haute couture collections.