On May 9, 2025, Miu Miu’s Tales & Tellers initiative arrived in New York City with a cinematic flair. Set against the backdrop of Manhattan’s industrial heritage and artistic legacy, the night unfolded as a celebration of women’s voices, fashion, and the timeless power of storytelling.
Terminal warehouse: From concrete to canvas
The evening began at Terminal Warehouse in Chelsea—an iconic industrial space reimagined by Miu Miu into a glowing stage for narrative expression. Known for its raw, exposed architecture, the venue was transformed into a dreamscape where fashion met film and guests became part of a living installation. It was not just an event; it was a curated experience.

Tales & Tellers is Miu Miu’s ongoing initiative that highlights the intersection of fashion and female-driven stories. In this New York edition, the program emphasized the brand’s ethos: that fashion isn’t merely decorative, but declarative. Around the venue, short films directed by women played in curated loops, while sculptural installations and projection art offered intimate windows into a multitude of perspectives—some quiet, others defiant, all powerful.
Guests navigated the space at their own rhythm, discovering each narrative station like pages in a visual diary. The experience was at once deeply personal and openly communal—a balance Miu Miu has perfected through years of pushing creative boundaries.
A guest list that spoke volumes
The guest list, naturally, matched the ambition of the evening. International stars from the worlds of fashion, film, and contemporary art gathered in style. Among them were Alexa Chung, always an emblem of cool-girl sophistication; Sarah Paulson, whose onscreen presence mirrors her sharp offscreen insight; and Kiki Layne, known for her boundary-breaking roles and fearless fashion.

Legendary photographer Brigitte Lacombe added gravity to the room, while emerging talents like Antonia Gentry and Chloe East embodied the next generation of female creators. Together, this crowd formed a dynamic mosaic of creative voices—each guest a teller of tales in their own right.
What united them was more than their celebrity; it was their shared alignment with Miu Miu’s values. From stylists to screenwriters, from actors to artists, the guests mirrored the night’s central message: that storytelling is not limited to the page or the screen—it lives in how we dress, speak, move, and choose to be seen.
The Films: Miu Miu’s women’s tales on display
The Tales & Tellers event is rooted in the legacy of Women’s Tales, Miu Miu’s long-running series of short films created by female directors. Since 2011, the project has provided a platform for boundary-pushing narratives about womanhood, agency, and identity—often starring Miu Miu’s own collections as wordless characters woven into the frame.
In New York, selected films from the series played in looped projections across the venue. From psychological drama to lyrical fantasy, these stories unfolded in diverse forms and tones. What connected them was their sensitivity, their complexity, and their unapologetic femininity.

Many of the installations were interactive. One room invited guests to write their own “mini memoir” on slips of fabric, pinning them onto a communal wall. Another mirrored room reflected not just the guests’ outfits, but snippets of quotes from the films—lines like “You don’t need permission to exist,” or “Fashion is a language I choose to speak.” The films weren’t just on display—they were extended, embodied, echoed.
Hotel Chelsea: A dinner worth a novel
After the visual symphony of Terminal Warehouse, guests were led to the legendary Hotel Chelsea for a more intimate conclusion. A landmark in New York’s artistic history, the hotel has hosted icons from Patti Smith to Leonard Cohen—making it the ideal venue for a night rooted in art, rebellion, and narrative freedom.
Miu Miu’s dinner was held in a candlelit room with tall windows, velvet chairs, and long communal tables layered in vintage china, art books, and floral centerpieces inspired by literary heroines. Each place card bore a handwritten quote by a woman writer—from Audre Lorde to Virginia Woolf—turning the dinner into an extension of the exhibit’s themes.
The menu featured seasonal ingredients with poetic titles, and the courses were introduced not just with descriptions, but with stories—tales about the origin of the dishes or the women who inspired them. Guests didn’t just eat; they shared, remembered, and imagined. The room buzzed with creative energy, not performative but deeply personal.
Why this night mattered
More than a social affair, Miu Miu’s New York edition of Tales & Tellers served as a cultural intervention. In an era of fast content and fashion trends that fade by the hour, the brand is choosing longevity—focusing on narratives that resonate rather than merely impress.
By giving women the platform to direct, design, and define their own stories, Miu Miu makes a statement that extends beyond luxury. It becomes about meaning—about whose voices we hear, whose visions we value, and what we wear when we choose to speak out.
The event was glamorous, yes. But it was also deeply intentional. Every dress, every image, every exchange was a chapter in a larger book—one that Miu Miu continues to write with every collection, every collaboration, and every tale it helps bring into the light.
In a city that has always lived by its stories, Miu Miu’s Tales & Tellers felt right at home—an ode to the artists, rebels, and dreamers who remind us that fashion isn’t just what we wear, but how we tell the world who we are.