
What we saw at the Paris Fashion Week menswear shows
The sweltering conditions were perhaps an incidental metaphor for the pressure the industry is feeling as the global luxury industry experiences a troubling slowdown. To this end, the Spring-Summer 2026 collections felt restrained. In a climate of uncertainty, designers proposed modular, adaptable wardrobes attuned to a global consumer, and the attention shifted away from slogans and theatrics toward refined construction and nuance, with block colors, versatile garments and an eye towards utility. That said, when it came to show production, the bar remained high, with runways once again staged at major Parisian landmarks, attended by a bevy of A-List guests.
The week's most anticipated event took place at the famed Hôtel des Invalides, where Dior presented its first show by Jonathan Anderson, the founder of London label J.W. Anderson, who stepped down from Loewe after transforming the luxury brand over the past 11 years. Pop royalty and industry titans, including Rihanna, Sabrina Carpenter, Donatella Versace and Robert Pattinson, all sat front row for his highly anticipated debut, which was set in a room mimicking interiors of Berlin's Gemäldegalerie museum featuring 18th-century artworks.
Off the heels of Dior Men's era of Kim Jones, who offered elegant twists on menswear in theatrical runway shows, Anderson ushered in a playful, everyday sense of luxury, delving into the house's heritage by reintroducing classic silhouettes morphed in new ways. The Bar jacket, cinched at the waist and introduced in the 1950s, was presented oversized — with a skirt-suit version simultaneously showcased by Carpenter in the front row — while cargo pants featured trailing panels that echoed the 1949 Dior Delft ball gown. Flowers, central to Christian Dior and his garden in Granville, featured as minute embroideries and a handbag that replicated a cover of the 1857 book 'Les Fleurs du Mal' by French poet Charles Baudelaire.
At another Parisian cultural landmark, in front of the Centre Pompidou, Pharrell Williams presented a majestic show for Louis Vuitton with Beyoncé and Jay-Z arriving last before the sunset event. But the collection proved more understated than its presentation, despite its focus on India's sartorial influence on contemporary fashion. The set, by architect Bijoy Jain of Studio Mumbai, was a life-sized take on the ancient Indian board game of Snakes and Ladders. Tailoring came with an air of effortless dandyism, with indigo overcoats and mustard pleated shorts before moving toward hiking chic, with windbreakers and climbing boots complete with bejeweled socks. The eccentric show felt spun off from a Wes Anderson set, and that was intentional — with jacket motifs paying homage to the Louis Vuitton trunks featured in Anderson's 2007 train-journey film 'The Darjeeling Limited,' set in India.
Rather than a museum setting, the British-born designer Grace Wales Bonner celebrated the 10th anniversary of her eponymous label by going back to school. Titled 'Jewel,' the collection took the stage at the prestigious Lycée Henri-IV secondary school in the city's Latin Quarter and explored the idea of inheritance.
The garments' layered, preppy lines drew on British know-how through collaborations with Savile Row tailors Anderson & Sheppard and milliner Stephen Jones for berets. Staying true to her signature fusion of genres, Bonner also partnered with streetwear brand Y-3. In addition to sporty, paper-thin knits and sheer bejeweled shirting, Bonner paired flared silhouettes with patent opera pumps, and elevated tailcoats with baobab brooches and pops of colors on lapels and collars.
At several shows, bright colors snuck onto the runway, sometimes paired with equally subversive messaging, and, at other times, a playful new take on tradition.
For his second presentation in Paris, American designer Willy Chavarria opened with a bold performance — in collaboration with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) — directly referencing the Trump administration's contested deportations of Venezuelan migrants to prisons in El Salvador. The sequence included 35 men in white t-shirts kneeling on the runway floor, appearing to echo images taken inside the Cecot megaprison; it was a declaration against 'people being profiled and persecuted with no due process,' per the show notes.
From this emotional beginning, Chavarria, who often weaves Latino sartorial codes into direct political statements and messages of inclusion, revisited retro inspirations: zoot suits and film noir-inspired silhouettes in baby pink, lavender and brass satin dress coats, complete with a collaboration with classic shoemaker Charles Jourdan.
At Saint Laurent, creative director Anthony Vaccarello's inspiration came from the queer communities of 1970s Fire Island in New York. That summer vibrancy translated into clothing through splashes of mustard, lime, and tangerine hues, with strong suiting softened by silk shirts topped by ton-sur-ton skinny ties or airy chiffon blouses with pussy bows.
And, at Dries Van Noten, newly appointed creative director Julian Klausner unveiled his first menswear collection for the Belgian brand. Titled 'Just a Perfect Day,' the modular wardrobe shifted and loosened up over the course of an imagined night out, playing with both the hybridity of formal and casual as well as masculine and feminine. The collection featured sarongs layered over trousers, silk waistcoats paired with boxing shorts, and traditional cummerbunds — in mint or hot pink — added to more casual silhouettes.
On the last day of menswear fashion week, Jacquemus, led by Simon Porte Jacquemus, hosted its closing duties. The label has become known for translating Provençal traditions into exuberant womenswear, menswear, and viral accessories.
The grand show at Versailles drew a sparkling front row including actors Matthew McConaughey, Gillian Anderson and Laura Harrier. Known for weaving his own biography into his work, Jacquemus once again looked to his South of France childhood, but this time bringing his rural upbringing to the court of the king, at the palace's maze-like Orangery.
The collection featured a milky palette of white, eggshell and soft pinks, constructed as ruffled aprons and corseted blouses. Tablecloth-inspired embroideries, and playful tassels referenced traditional Southern France — as did trompe-l'œil leather accessories shaped like garlic, strawberries, and leeks. Memory and myth intertwined in the show, from Marcel Pagnol films to the designer's great-grandmother and the English tourists of his childhood, he explained backstage.
He used the French term 'endimanché,' or dressing up on Sunday, to describe the crisp, opaline feel of the collection, 'almost like a nurse, very minimal… my grandmother was always in white with bijoux, very pure.' Provence, he added, 'is always a dream… a very important cliché.'
Scroll for the highlights from the Paris Fashion Week men's shows.
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I was taken by Yang's extreme technical skill in painting and the conceptual and symbolic depth to her work. We have had so many rich & fascinating conversations around Chinese culture and life, portraiture, still-life painting, porcelain and its history, performance, femininity and identity, beauty, politics, nature, time, and memory.' Eugenia Durandy de Naurois-Turgot and Lucy van Goetz met as students at Sotheby's Institute, and formed a strong friendship, going on to collaborate with each other on the Xu Yau exhibition when Lucy posed the idea of exhibiting Xu's art at the Château. Eugenia told me that at the heart of the exhibition is her wish to 'make the Château a place of living dialogue between past, present and future.' Image by Bater & Street. Installation view, 'Forget Me Not', Xu Yang - Courtesy of von Goetz Courtesy of von Goetz. Image by Bater & Street. Symbols and Storytelling: The Language of Still Life Yang's work is displayed subtly within the grand rooms of the Château, appearing to create a dialogue with its layered history, its French gardens, wartime stories and art collections. Yet her pieces do not sit passively in the space; they question and converse, breathing new life into a setting defined by heritage. Yang's reimagined still lifes and narrative paintings reframe what legacy can mean in today's global, hybridized world. Lucy von Goetz explained to me that, although Yang visited the space when preparing for the exhibition, her work was already engrained with a Baroque meets Old Master style and aesthetic, so it was a perfect pairing of artist with location when the idea of the Château de Lautheil exhibition arose: 'Yang's artworks in Forget Me Not were not created in response to the Chateau's art collection, history and family lineage. The pieces were created as a body of work for Forget Me Not to deal with the questions we posited curatorially and conceptually. I took Yang on a site visit in August 2024 to see the Chateau and it was definitely useful for her to see the setting to imagine the place the works would sit. It was also enjoyable to learn more the history of the Chateau and some of the stories connected there. But I think ultimately the works are much wider than saying they are in response to the setting. It was the works that came first then the setting. Yang has long been making Rococo and Old Masters influenced paintings, often speaking of French Court painting, and Dutch still lifes, and the soft power of the cultivation of female identity. It just felt right to find a setting that could hold Yang's work in a new way.' Lucy von Goetz describes the show as 'a merging of the earthly and the surreal, the East and the West, the historic and the contemporary.' She adds, 'This exhibition sets out our commitment to showcasing the finest artists whose work resonates with the time and setting they inhabit.' Xu Yang's practice is as intellectually rigorous as it is visually sumptuous. A graduate of Wimbledon College of Arts and the Royal College of Art in London, she continues to challenge boundaries between personal history and public narrative, often inserting her own image into her paintings as a way of confronting societal expectations and inviting reflection. Yang's paintings are full of symbols and metaphors such as eyes, snails, butterflies, wheat sheafs and even a disembodied finger. Her attention to detail and use of finely tuned still life techniques harks back to the Dutch Still life painters, while the paintings are full of multi-layered cultural symbolism. Lucy von Goetz. Image by Bater & Street. Bater & Street Legacy in Gold and Blue: The Finger and the Butterfly I asked von Goetz to explain the significance of a mysterious gold finger in the corner of one small painting with a blue butterfly at its centre: 'Over lunch a few months back Yang was speaking to me about what we leave behind when we die. How often it is a combination of jewellery and artworks that make it to be handed down to new generations. We spoke about these trinkets that we have left as our memory and way of holding on to people when they are gone. The value that we can place in something is everything and nothing at the same time. This piece includes a lot of adornments and beautiful items, Yang places the gold finger at the bottom of the work to literally 'point out' the danger of placing value on the wrong things, this is King Midas's finger - who famously was confronted with the dangerous reality of his desires. The blue butterfly in the centre is a 'morpho' butterfly and is a reminder that we have physical bodies and that we have souls–nature's grace and mystery.' Image by Bater & Street. 'It is worth nothing. It is worth everything.' by Xu Yang. Courtesy of von Goetz. Courtesy of von Goetz. Image by Bater & Street The Fig and the Forbidden: Painting Female Desire Another recurring symbol is the fig, which Xu Yang explains to me is a metaphor for sexuality and the guilt women often carry relating to their own bodies: 'Sexuality and feeling of shame or guilt for women, famously Adam and Eve used fig leaves to cover their body after eaten Forbidden Fruit. I think women–especially those with more conservative upbringings like myself–are often feeling ashamed of talking about desire and sexuality openly, while I'm trying to untie the knot of that ideology being instilled in me growing up, I'm still not finding it the easiest subject to talk about verbally. So I started including drawings and paintings in my work to speak for me.' Forget Me Not is more than an exhibition—it is a meditation on time, memory, and the enduring power of cultural exchange. In placing a contemporary Chinese artist's deeply personal work inside a French château steeped in Enlightenment thought, the show becomes a living, breathing fusion of past and present. Installation view, Forget Me Not. Image courtesy of von Goetz. Courtesy of von Goetz. Xu Yang: Forget Me Not is on view at Château de Lantheuil, Normandy, until 10th July, 2025. Curated by Lucy von Goetz with the kind permission of the Turgot family. Image by Bater & Street - Installation view - 'Forget Me Not', Xu Yang. Courtesy of von Goetz. Courtesy of von Goetz.