An anticipated Paris present presenting Dior’s newest males’s assortment, set to be launched in 2026, and the primary designed beneath ex-Loewe’s Jonathan Anderson route, made refined nods to European artwork and tradition.
Dior introduced its newest males’s assortment on the Invalides, a museum advanced centered on French army historical past, utilizing a big black-and-white picture of Christian Dior’s unique salon as a backdrop. The show, which stretched throughout the doorway, was meant to sign the 80-year-old model’s historic connection to French tradition.
The Dior Homme’s 2026 Spring/Summer time assortment was the primary designed by Anderson after taking over the place final month. He’s now overseeing males’s and ladies’s designs on the home, the primary designer in the home’s historical past to carry each roles concurrently.
Within the Paris present, Anderson, avoiding dramatic adjustments, combined a few of Dior’s heritage with the current, as first reported by critic Vanessa Friedman of the New York Instances. Friedman wrote that the gathering meshed “formal and informal, historic and up to date,” whereas in response to Dazed, Anderson was centering the “aristocrat,” because the present’s fundamental idea, utilizing 18th century European artwork and English tailoring to ship the message.
Dazed additionally famous that the present’s stage was designed to imitate visuals from older museum exhibitions that use velvet as wallpaper, together with the Berlin’s Gemäldegalerie gallery and New York’s Frick assortment, each holding European artwork collections.
The Paris present drew from that design selection, masking the Invalides’ inside partitions with off-white velvet, and hanging two work by 18th century French still-life artist Jean Siméon Chardin that had been loaned from the Nationwide Galleries of Scotland and the Louvre.
Previous to the debut present, Anderson’s artwork references had been leaking by on-line. Earlier this month, Dior printed well-known pictures of social and creative royalty from Anderson’s “temper board,” on social media: separate polaroids of Lee Radizwill, an American-European princess and fixture in aristocratic circles, and painter Jean Michel-Basquiat, each topic of Andy Warhol.
Radizwill’s connection to Dior’s historical past started within the Nineteen Sixties beneath the label’s then-creative director, Marc Bohan, who used her as a muse. (A 1977 silk gown designed by Bohan, gifted by Radizwill, is within the Met’s assortment.)
Anderson’s first girls’s assortment shall be introduced in September.