For his highly anticipated first Cruise collection for Dior, Jonathan Anderson transformed Los Angeles into a cinematic fantasy drenched in florals, Hollywood nostalgia, and couture-level craftsmanship. Presented at the iconic Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Dior Cruise 2027 show embraced the glamour of Old Hollywood while injecting Anderson’s poetic and intellectual sensibility into the House’s legendary codes.
Jonathan Anderson makes a stunning Dior debut in Los Angeles
The grounds of LACMA became an illusionary version of Los Angeles itself, complete with ornamental streetlights and vintage convertible cars that evoked the mood of a noir film set. Anderson leaned heavily into references tied to the House’s Hollywood legacy, revisiting the moment Monsieur Dior earned an Oscar nomination for Best Costume Design in 1955, while also nodding to the unforgettable declaration by Marlene Dietrich: “No Dior, No Dietrich!”



Florals became the defining visual language of the collection. Thousands of handcrafted decorative flowers were created specifically for the show, including delicate silk organza blooms painted using a nineteenth-century artisanal technique. The Californian poppy emerged as a recurring symbol throughout the collection, appearing embroidered across tailoring, embellishing outerwear, and softening structured menswear silhouettes.




Menswear pieces delivered a floral-power diversion that felt both romantic and subversive. Anderson reworked classic tailoring codes with shimmering textures and couture embellishments. A newly imagined Bar jacket arrived in glittering wool bouclé, while Prince of Wales checks and houndstooth patterns were entirely rendered in embroidered sequins. The balance between masculine structure and decorative softness created one of the most intriguing menswear directions seen from Dior in recent seasons.





The collection also featured a collaboration with celebrated American artist Ed Ruscha, whose distinctly Californian visual language blended naturally with Anderson’s storytelling. Meanwhile, legendary milliner Philip Treacy contributed dramatic headpieces that elevated the cinematic mood of the show.
Hollywood and fashion collided front row as a packed celebrity lineup attended the spectacle at LACMA. Among the ambassadors and guests were Jisoo, Greta Lee, Taylor Russell, Tracee Ellis Ross, Steven Yeun, Eileen Gu, Archie Madekwe, and Anthony Ippolito.





Additional attendees included Miley Cyrus, Anya Taylor-Joy, Sophie Wilde, Cooper Koch, Yumi Kawai, and Seoyeon Jang, further reinforcing the collection’s intersection between global celebrity culture and cinematic glamour.
With Cruise 2027, Jonathan Anderson doesn’t simply revisit Dior’s Hollywood past — he reframes it through a surreal, floral, and emotionally intelligent lens. The result is a collection where menswear tailoring blooms with cinematic romance, proving that Anderson’s new chapter at Dior is already shaping into one of fashion’s most compelling creative evolutions.



