The Art of Haute Couture
From the ateliers of Chanel to the surrealist runway of Schiaparelli — an exploration of the craftsmanship, tradition, and innovation that define haute couture today.
1. mart 2026.

Haute couture is more than fashion — it is architecture in fabric, sculpture in motion. In the ateliers of Paris, a handful of houses preserve a tradition of hand-craftsmanship that has defined luxury for over a century. At Chanel, the petites mains spend hundreds of hours on a single jacket, weighting hems with chains and stitching bouclé tweed by hand. At Dior, the legacy of the New Look lives on in structured Bar jackets and cascading tulle skirts that embody the dreamlike precision of the couture atelier. And at Schiaparelli, creative director Daniel Roseberry channels the founder's surrealist spirit through sculptural gold jewelry and embroidered gowns that reference Dalí's lobsters and Man Ray's lips. What unites these houses is not a single aesthetic but a shared commitment to the idea that fashion can be art — that a garment can carry meaning, history, and human skill in every stitch.