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Vogue US
|August 2025
After a career in New York, Paris, and London, Louise Trotter arrives at Bottega Veneta speaking a new language. By Chiara Barzini.
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The location of my first meeting with Louise Trotter, the new creative director of Bottega Veneta, is confirmed just an hour before we're due to meet. It feels fitting: Bottega Veneta has long been known for a kind of elegant restraint, and until very recently Trotter has been deliberately private about her debut collection, keeping even her process closely guarded.
The address finally arrives: Villa Clerici, an aristocratic mansion nestled in the Niguarda district of Milan, north of the city. Once you're past the imposing gate, a hidden world unfolds—first an enormous Italian garden dotted with statues, then another large garden at the rear containing two amphitheaters. Villa Clerici’s interior rooms feature 18th-century frescoes, trompe l'oeil decorations, and coffered ceilings. It all feels opulent yet somehow restrained—sacred and slightly surreal at the same time.
I walk up the stairs in the quiet afternoon and find Trotter at the end of a long corridor, enfolded in a Raphael Raffel leather lounge sofa from the 1970s with custom Bottega Veneta leather, produced by Cassina. A wide window behind her overlooks the arched courtyard. “I realized we couldn't not do the interview here,” Trotter says with a smile. She has a kind of whimsical mystery to her, mixed with an innate curiosity and intelligence. “In Paris, everything is grand and declared—in Milan, you have to find your own treasures.”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2025-Ausgabe von Vogue US.
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