Georges Vuitton's Private Grief









The LV monogram began as a tribute to a father — and became one of the most reproduced symbols in the history of visual culture
When Georges Vuitton, son of Louis Vuitton, created the house's monogram in 1896, he could not have imagined it would become one of fashion's most enduring symbols.
The motif was deeply personal — a tribute to his father, who had passed away four years earlier, in 1892. At its centre stood the initials "LV", framed by stylised floral emblems — a composition that evoked memory and renewal. The Louis Vuitton monogram is among the earliest examples of a modern logo; at the time in France, a style was gaining ground that drew on neo-Gothic influences, Japonisme, and the emerging Art Nouveau movement. The pattern is said to draw from both Eastern and Western motifs, reflecting evolving ideas about the connections between eras and ornament