Courtesy of Loewe
Jonathan Anderson ends his 12-year Loewe tenure with a quiet collection, as Proenza Schouler prepares to usher in the house’s next chapter.
The buzz around Jonathan Anderson’s debut at Dior is undeniable, with actors like Josh O’Connor, Greta Lee, Mia Goth, Lakeith Stanfield, Alba Rohrwacher, and Anya Taylor-Joy already wearing this new composition during the Toronto and Venice Film Festivals. It is the calm before the storm, the prelude to Dior’s next era, yet Anderson has one last melody to play in Loewe’s ongoing symphony.
His Fall Winter 2025 collection arrives as both a scrapbook of ideas and a farewell to one of fashion’s most influential tenures of the decade. It’s the last verse in a twelve-year oeuvre that turned a sleepy Spanish leather house into one of LVMH’s most powerful players. Where Dior suggests spectacle, Loewe’s finale feels cerebral and private, a gathering of notions rather than a blockbuster statement.
The collection is based on a collaboration with the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation. Josef’s Homage to the Square influences the layered color treatments seen in coats and knits, while Anni’s woven abstractions inspire the leather surfaces and textiles. The color palette includes ochre, rust, sienna, cobalt, yellow, and pastel shades, with black and white adding contrast. Silhouettes showcase Anderson’s signature blend of tension, combining cropped jackets and sculptural coats with elongated skirts, soft knits, and tailored trousers. The overall design is both structured and fluid, architectural yet intimate.
Accessories remain the central story. The Puzzle, Flamenco, Amazona, and Madrid bags are styled as sculptural protagonists. New footwear designs, from the Toy mule to the Ballet runner and Comic sandal, expand the vocabulary of the brand. Anderson always understood that accessories could be both cultural and commercial anchors, and even here they dominate the narrative.
The campaign, shot by Arnaud Lajeunie, continues Anderson’s tradition of casting actors and artists whose presence defines a creative community. Jiang Qiming, Lesley Manville, Felix Kammerer, and Raffey Cassidy appear in portraits that highlight textures, cuts, and surfaces. Collage and Shield Mask sunglasses serve as graphic punctuation, echoing the influence of Albers. The mood is stark and restrained, more a distillation of Anderson’s language than a final flourish.
The collection is also tied to philanthropy. Loewe will support Les Foyers de Tambacounda in Senegal, funding the Sutura sewing collective, an arts programme with L’École des Beaux-Arts de Dakar, and a tire recycling project. This final gesture reinforces Anderson’s belief that fashion can extend beyond commerce and aesthetics.
As he departs, Loewe prepares for its next act under Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez of Proenza Schouler, who will present their debut in Paris in September 2025. Their American pragmatism will be a stark contrast to Anderson’s intellectual surrealism, closing one era with restraint so the next can begin with impact.
In the Philippines, Loewe is exclusively distributed by Stores Specialists, Inc., and is located at Shangri-La Plaza Mall East Wing, Greenbelt 3, and The Mall | NUSTAR Cebu. Visit ssilife.com.ph or follow @ssilifeph on Instagram for more information.
- Here’s Who Attended The Loewe Puzzle 10 Re-Edition Exhibition in Hong Kong
- Jonathan Anderson exits Loewe
- Jonathan Anderson Brings the Loewe Foundation Craft Prize to Paris for Its Most Playful Outing Yet
- Wired to Succeed: Racso Jugarap on Becoming the First Filipino Finalist of the Loewe Craft Prize