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Photo: Gucci
Just weeks after his closely watched runway debut for Gucci, Demna is already moving beyond the catwalk. This time, the setting is Milan Design Week, where the house is preparing to unveil Memoria, an exhibition that will mark the designer’s first design-focused project for Gucci and extend his arrival into a different kind of public space. According to Hypebeast, the show opens to the public from April 21 to April 26, 2026, during Fuorisalone, and will be staged inside Milan’s 16th-century San Simpliciano monastery in the Brera district.
The title alone suggests a house looking inward. Gucci has described the exhibition as a symbolic retelling of its 105-year history, one that reflects the brand’s many transformations and creative identities while inviting visitors into an immersive narrative connecting past and present. Rather than presenting heritage as something static, Memoria sounds designed to frame memory as an active material: something that can be edited, reinterpreted, and staged anew under a different creative eye. The second sentence here is an interpretation based on Gucci’s stated framing of the show.

There is also a broader strategic context to the project. In recent years, Gucci has steadily expanded its presence at Milan Design Week, following exhibitions such as Design Ancora in 2024 and Bamboo Encounters in 2025. Seen in that sequence, Memoria does not read like a one-off gesture, but as part of a larger effort to position Gucci more forcefully within the design world, where luxury brands are increasingly treating interiors, objects, and spatial experiences as essential extensions of fashion itself. Hypebeast also notes that fashion houses including Hermès and Prada have become more visible in this arena, especially as design week continues to attract attention far beyond the trade world.
That makes Demna’s involvement especially telling. His first Gucci runway outing in late February generated substantial attention, and Memoria appears to function as an immediate follow-up in a different register: less about spectacle on the runway, more about authorship, atmosphere, and the management of legacy. If the show succeeds, it may offer an early clue as to how Demna intends to handle one of Gucci’s biggest challenges: how to engage the weight of the archive without becoming trapped by it. That final sentence is my own inference from the timing and framing of the exhibition.
The exhibition also arrives at a moment when Milan Design Week 2026 is expected to draw an international crowd of around 500,000 visitors, underlining just how significant the platform has become for brands looking to shape cultural conversation beyond fashion month. In that context, Memoria feels less like a side project and more like an early statement of intent — one that places memory, immersion, and historical self-mythology at the centre of Gucci’s next chapter.
