Hermès Turns its Venice Windows Into an “Inside The Cabinet” Still Life of Vessels, Furniture and Food
Hermès has turned its Venice windows into a quietly surreal still life with “Inside the Cabinet,” a new site specific project where handcrafted vessels, furniture and food form a
Hermès Turns its Venice Windows Into an “Inside The Cabinet” Still Life of Vessels, Furniture and Food
Hermès has turned its Venice windows into a quietly surreal still life with “Inside the Cabinet,” a new site specific project where handcrafted vessels, furniture and food form a contemplative stage for the house’s objects, on view until August 2026.
Inside The Cabinet Concept
“Inside the Cabinet” imagines the window as a cabinet like interior where everyday objects oscillate “between memory and imagination.” Within this constructed world, vessels, furniture and food become both props and protagonists, their forms suggesting domesticity, ritual and gathering without spelling out a literal narrative.
The installation is conceived so that Hermès pieces from table objects to accessories sit among these handcrafted elements as if discovered in situ, part of a life that is implied rather than fully shown. This approach keeps the brand’s objects integrated into the scene instead of isolated as stand alone product displays.
Handcrafted Objects With Visible Traces
Each element in the…
cabinet environment is handmade by the artist, intentionally retaining the trace of its making. Surfaces reveal tool marks, textures and slight irregularities that pull the composition away from pure luxury polish and toward something more tactile and human.
This emphasis on process echoes Hermès’ own craft centric ethos, aligning the artist’s language with the maison’s longstanding focus on materials and savoir faire. It also reinforces the idea that what we see in the window is less a fixed tableau and more a snapshot in an ongoing story shaped by time, material and perception.
Venice As A Setting Set in Venice, Italy, the project responds to a city defined by layers of history, interiors hidden behind facades, and a constant play between water, reflection and stone.
The cabinet metaphor resonates strongly in this context: Venetian palazzi and apartments are filled with vitrines, cupboards and shelves where objects hold memories of travel, family and ritual…
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