“Surrealist images manage to make visible what is in itself invisible,” says Maria Grazia Chiuri of Dior’s fall winter collection. “I’m interested in mystery and magic, which are also a way of exorcising uncertainty about the future.”

During this unprecedented period, Chiuri, the Creative Director of Dior women’s collections, chose to focus on the work of artists like Lee Miller, Dora Maar and Jacqueline Lamba, who transcended the role of “muses” to which their beauty had initially relegated them in order to champion—in their lives and surrealist works—a different kind of femininity.
The new collection is imbued with that attitude: one that is connected, attuned to nature and transformation. Certain pieces display spectacular gradations of red, like a coral reef swaying in the glimmer of the ocean. The colors of paintings by Leonora Carrington and Dorothea Tanning live on in these creations through luminous hues and dreamworlds.

The surrealists’ female body also conjures up a reinterpretation of the miniature mannequin, a poetic emblem at the heart of the couture universe. The artist Cindy Sherman appropriates this almost magical object into one of her first video projects, which oscillates between the history of fashion and the possibility of a new representation; today, these
miniatures make it possible to invent a different ritual.
And so, in a magical trunk, one that embodies 30 Avenue Montaigne, the haute couture collection embarks on its world
tour. Evoking Monsieur Dior’s own odyssey, it echoes the Théâtre de la Mode, a roving exhibition of styles by French couturiers that travelled between Europe and the U.S. right after the war.

The Dior ateliers also played a major role in that adventure. Starting with haute couture “day looks,” with suits in men’s fabrics of exceptional architecture representing a virtuoso feat, that of a perfectly-crafted, miniature creation. A coat reveals pleated layers; draping evokes antique statues; luminescence sublimates the gray and golden yellow tones,
offering a dazzling brilliance.

Produced entirely by hand, the folds dressing these miniatures celebrate the beauty of the creative gesture, which is the essence of couture. For the grand finale, and in keeping with tradition, the wedding gown, a symbol forgotten over time.

In this way, it feels only natural to recount the story of extraordinary haute couture silhouettes by reinterpreting the
female body through the singular prism of the fashion doll.
