Fashion
Dior: Mythic Threads & Ancient Sovereignty for F/W 26-27 | Paris Couture Fashion Week
Admire a breathtaking revival of classical form and modern empowerment – watch the Christian Dior Fall/Winter 2026/27 Haute Couture showcase now on FashionTV!
Under the roof of a leafy hothouse constructed in the historic gardens of the Musee Rodin, Jonathan Anderson delivered his highly anticipated sophomore haute couture collection for Christian Dior on July 6, 2026. Stepping firmly into the spotlight following Maria Grazia Chiuri’s historic tenure, Anderson has established a radical new creative direction for the house – one that directly treats the discipline of haute couture as an artistic laboratory.
For the fall/winter 2026/27 season, Anderson staged an ambitious, visceral dialogue between fine art and fashion, taking the pioneering, fluid sculptures of American feminist artist Lynda Benglis as his ultimate creative catalyst. The runway, finished in a sleek, reflective black lacquer, was surrounded by dense green foliage, ferns, and exotic plantings meant to evoke Benglis’s personal gardens in New Mexico and India.
This natural, slightly untamed setting served as the perfect framework for a collection centered around the concept of “material in motion.” The ultimate litmus test for any designer entering the gates of 30 Avenue Montaigne is the reinvention of the iconic 1947 Bar Suit. Anderson’s brilliant solution was essentially to melt it down – stripping away the rigid internal padding and stiff corseting of old, and replacing them with sensuously draped, bias-cut shapes, fluid silk pajama-style sets, and featherweight knitted jackets that gave the female form absolute freedom of movement.
The 66 looks beautifully mirrored Benglis’s famous practice of converting two-dimensional materials into voluptuous, three-dimensional forms. Anderson toyed masterfully with the illusion of rigor and the poetry of fluid drapery. In a direct nod to the artist’s legendary use of chicken wire to mold heavy, poured materials, the Dior ateliers produced voluminous, jaw-dropping skirts constructed from silver metallic netting and crushed-foil-pleated silks that danced under the studio lights like liquid metal.
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