Dom Pérignon just turned the year-end gift season into a gallery opening. The Maison has teamed up with contemporary art powerhouse Takashi Murakami to create two limited-edition bottles—Dom Pérignon Vintage 2015 and Dom Pérignon Rosé Vintage 2010—plus an ultra-rare “Uber” objet d’art that folds Murakami’s playful universe into the ritual of champagne drinking. The collaboration lands October 1, 2025, and it’s exactly the kind of creative crossover that makes collectors and culture fans sit up and take note.

Murakami’s signature smiling flowers, rendered in his unmistakable Superflat style, explode across dark, elegant coffrets and bottle labels. The result is a joyous collision of restraint and abundance: Dom Pérignon’s pared-back, textural codes meet Murakami’s hyper-saturated, manga-inflected graphics. It’s a visual stunt that still feels thoughtful—less brand stunt, more contemporary altar.
“Through my collaboration with Dom Pérignon, I wanted to express a form of time travel,” Murakami says, a fitting line for a union that ties centuries-old winemaking craft to a pop-cultural present. “When the label has aged, and I am gone, and my children are gone, I hope that people of the future, when they see it, will reimagine 2025 in their own minds.”
Beyond aesthetics, the project is steeped in tactile and sensory thinking—no surprise from a house that treats vintage as an act of creation. Dom Pérignon Vintage 2015 is described as dense, tactile, and horizontally structured: wines that speak in line and texture rather than flourish. The Rosé 2010, by contrast, represents a decade of experimentation toward a more radical pinot noir energy—poised, delicate, and quietly powerful. These aren’t just pretty faces in pretty boxes; they’re serious bottles given fresh visual voices.
For the truly extravagant, the Uber piece is a showstopper: a perfectly polished sphere that opens to reveal a miniature secret garden of hand-sculpted resin flowers, and—at the center—the last Jeroboams of Dom Pérignon Rosé Vintage 2008. Think of it as a tiny, luxe diorama where craftsmanship, color and bubble converge. It’s a theatrical piece that turns opening a bottle into an event, a ritual of discovery marrying Murakami’s pop surrealism with Dom Pérignon’s reverence for maturation and time.
What makes this collaboration sing is how both creator and Maison reframe tradition as living practice. Murakami’s Superflat borrows from ukiyo-e and anime to interrogate surface and depth; Dom Pérignon distills terroir and time into vintages that reveal themselves slowly. Together they ask the same question: how do we translate solitude—whether of a vineyard or a canvas—into shared emotion?
If you’re a collector, an art-lover, or simply someone who appreciates an impeccably packaged story, mark October 1 on your calendar. These limited editions promise to be conversation pieces long after the glasses are emptied—tiny time capsules of 2025, meant to be opened, admired, and savored. —Noa Nichol

October 14th, 2025 at 2:36 am
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