As Paris Haute Couture Week drew to a close with some of the season’s most anticipated Autumn-Winter 2026/27 proposals, Viktor&Rolf once again demonstrated that fashion can also become a staging charged with symbolism.
True to their conceptual universe, the Dutch designers Viktor Horsting and Rolf Snoeren presented a collection that revolved—literally and figuratively—around contrasts. On a circular stage that recreated a room, two models performed a perfectly synchronized choreography, as if one were the reflection of the other.

A show where mirrors were the starting point
The collection was built around a single silhouette interpreted from two entirely different viewpoints.

While one model wore luminous dresses, crafted in golden tones with bright finishes, the other appeared in the same shapes, but in a far more sober version, dominated by subdued colors and discreet textures.


The aim was to show how the same idea can transform depending on the perspective, the time, or the personality of the wearer.

“We had been thinking for a long time about the idea of the mirror: the same choreography, the same shape of the garments, and yet the differences,” the designers explained after the show.

Contrasts that also echoed in Haute Couture
The collection explored the dialogue between opposites: youth and maturity, brilliance and restraint, exuberance and minimalism.

Each turn reinforced this visual game with architectural volumes, fabrics of rich artisanal quality, and sculptural silhouettes that once again confirmed the house’s unmistakable signature.

More than presenting garments, Viktor&Rolf built a story where fashion functioned as a language capable of speaking about identity, the passage of time, and the various versions of a single person.

One of the most theatrical presentations of Paris Haute Couture Week

In a edition that also shone with Schiaparelli, Dior, Chanel, and Balenciaga, Viktor&Rolf’s proposal managed to stand out thanks to a staging that turned the runway into a true performance.

The combination of stage design, movement, and Haute Couture once again confirmed that the Dutch house remains one of the major references when it comes to pushing creativity beyond the runway.








