Jonathan Anderson at Dior: Psychedelia, Poiret, and the Thrill of Risk

Jonathan Anderson doesn’t climb mountains halfway. Having just scaled the formidable peak of his first men’s and women’s collections for Dior, the Northern Irish designer wasted no time in pushing himself — and the house — further into uncharted territory. Less than a week before unveiling his debut haute couture for Dior, Anderson presented his second men’s collection, and rather than consolidating, he chose exhilaration. Call it the fashion equivalent of extreme mountaineering.

If his inaugural show last June leaned into Dior’s own formidable archive, this time Anderson deliberately stepped away from familiar ground. Instead, he looked to the man who first made Avenue Montaigne a fashion destination: Paul Poiret. A radical in his time, Poiret was a master of drape, color, and theatrical liberation — a couturier who dismantled structure when others clung to it.

Outside Dior’s historic headquarters, a mosaic plaque embedded in the pavement pays tribute to Poiret. It’s a quiet marker for a loud legacy — and a fitting symbol of what fascinated Anderson. The parallels between the two designers are striking: both instinctive, experimental, and unafraid of challenging convention. The paradox, of course, is that neither Poiret nor Christian Dior ever designed menswear.

That contradiction is exactly what ignited Anderson’s imagination.

“I kind of like this idea of these two out-of-character landscapes meeting,” he explained ahead of the show. “Dior put the structure in, Poiret took it out.”

The collection’s spark came from a single garment: a purple Poiret dress Anderson acquired from a vintage dealer. Its spirit opened the show through a trio of sequined vests worn with jeans — a disarming, irreverent gesture that set the psychedelic tone. From there, the collection unfolded in vivid, unexpected ways.

See also  Marlon Teixeira Models H&M Spring/Summer 2015 Collection

Jacquard trousers clashed electric color combinations. Cocooning jackets enveloped the body. Polo shirts glittered with military-style epaulets. Tailored coats were transformed with chunky shearling cuffs and draped in Art Deco brocades woven in Italy by Poiret’s original suppliers — a historical loop closed with intent. A bronze parka bloomed with sculptural 3D flowers, while tailoring itself was thrown off-balance.

Shrunken Bar jackets — in houndstooth wool and distressed denim — sprouted exaggerated hourglass curves just beneath the armpits. Tailcoats appeared in cable knit or dense shearling, blurring the boundary between formality and fantasy. Through Anderson’s lens, menswear became elastic, unstable, and thrillingly alive.

With fluorescent yellow wigs, colossal down coats, and asymmetric wrap skirts, some models appeared almost alien — a visual jolt that recalled Junya Watanabe’s more radical moments. Anderson, however, cited John Galliano, another Dior creative director who mined Poiret’s legacy with fearless theatricality.

“Dior is about fashion. It never started as a leather goods brand,” Anderson said pointedly. “It has the history of fashion in it, with geniuses like John that created moments of spectacle. I think people want theatrics.”

Theatrics, yes — but not chaos. For all its hallucinatory energy, the collection was grounded by commercially astute pieces: tweed suits with subtly slanted shoulders, loose-cut jeans, shimmering knits. Early retail feedback suggests Anderson’s balancing act is working. With his first Dior men’s pieces landing in stores on January 2, the response has been swift and positive.

“It’s doing very well. Everyone’s very happy,” he confirmed.

What emerges is a portrait of a designer unwilling to settle into formulas.

See also  Dior Men Spring 2022 Paris

“I feel like we’re moving at speed here for quite a big machine,” Anderson reflected. “You don’t want it to be scripted. The minute something works and becomes the same every season, people get bored. You have to change quickly — otherwise, how do you make them tune in again?”

Perhaps the clearest sign of success came off the runway. Several guests arrived wearing the pleated white collars Anderson sent out as show invitations — a quiet signal that his vision is already being absorbed, worn, and echoed.

Risky? Absolutely. But Anderson seems most alive at the edge, where structure meets freedom and history collides with instinct. At Dior, he isn’t interested in predictability. He’s chasing altitude — and inviting the rest of us along for the climb.

Creative direction Jonathan Anderson
Styling Benjamin Bruno
Makeup Peter Philips 
Hair Guido Palau
Casting Ashley Brokaw
Production La Mode en Images
Show coordination Holmes Production
Broadcast direction Titre Provisoire
Music Studio Frederic Sanchez

spot_imgspot_img

Subscribe

Try Apple News

Related articles

Saint Laurent Men’s Winter 26 ⁣by Anthony Vaccarello⁣

Inspired by James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room, Anthony Vaccarello delivers a Fall 2026 Saint Laurent collection defined by sharp tailoring, subtle kink, and nocturnal elegance.

agnès b. Homme Autumn/Winter 2026 Paris

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kHHBf4rN6k Paris on a rainy Sunday afternoon with @agnesb_officiel as...

Wooyoungmi Men’s Autumn/Winter 2026 Collection in Paris

For Fall/Winter 2026, @Wooyoungmi romanticizes Seoul’s subzero winter — steam trains, snowdrifts and the old ritual of dressing for the journey.

Sacai Men’s Autumn & Winter 2026 Collection

The collection sees another Levi collaboration on the way...

Hermès Men’s Fall/Winter 2026 Paris – Véronique Nichanian’s Final Chapter

Hermès Men’s Fall/Winter 2026 in Paris marks the closing chapter of Véronique Nichanian’s nearly 40-year legacy, blending urban elegance, timeless craftsmanship, and emotional menswear design.
spot_imgspot_img
fashionablymale
fashionablymale
With Chris's positive vibes, each photo session comes alive, whisking you into a world of unmatched beauty and cool. Explore Fashionably Male, where since 2010, we've nailed the best trends and stunning features.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Loading...

Discover more from Fashionably Male

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Discover more from Fashionably Male

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading