valentino haute couture | specula mundi

If there’s one thing Alessandro Michele has taught us, it’s that his approach is anchored in deeply personal research, extensive references, and an immersive dive into archival works. For the Spring-Summer 2026 Haute Couture collection, shown just days after the passing of Monsieur Valentino, Michele created a spectacular tribute to the world of the house. It was with a deep sense of gratitude and respect that he dedicated the collection to Monsieur, expressing his thanks for the grace, the research and the inventivity of the couturier who crafted the house. 

When the guests entered the space, the eerily beautiful structures – barrel-shaped vessels emerging from the darkness – promised something strange and something beautiful was about to happen. The structures were reproductions of ‘Kaiserpanoramas’ – a device that appeared at the end of the 19th century, where viewers sat around the outside, looking into small portal-type windows, and was an optical machine that displayed stereoscopic images.

This eccentric optical device was rapidly replaced by cinema, but the charm and mechanical prowess of the projections remain a fascinating historical feat. One that Michele resurrected for the show, as guests peered in through the windows at the models inside. A ritual of observation, where a surreal form of intimacy and proximity with the models could be felt. Michele questioned the function of the gaze, of our status as observers and participants, feeling a surprising switch of passive observer to almost becoming a participant in the ritual. 

 

Titled ‘Specula Mundi’, the designs echoed the golden years of Hollywood, with highly intricate silhouettes, embroidered and draped, glistening and awe-inspiringly glamourous. Gowns recalled all the excellence of Valentino’s approach to textile in terms of cuts and draping, and minute details of bejewelled accessories, crowns, claw gloves added a touch of oneiric beauty that embodies all the poetry of Michele’s work. As models rotated and displayed the luscious, embroidered fabrics, feather headpieces, ruched collars and long satin trains, the audience saw scenes from a world gone by emerge. It was like being plunged into the imaginary world of cinema, of a bygone age, into the archives of Valentino, and into our collective memory.

Michele played perfectly with this double meaning of the gaze, as we revered and marvelled at the figures, so close and distant – light, excess, ornate. Haute Couture has a function in this world, as Monsieur Valentino’s words, which resounded throughout the space at the beginning of the show, reminded us – to dream, to create, to break into a world of imagination. And Michele perfectly paid tribute to that, with a poetic and touching show. 

Discover the Valentino Spring/Summer 2026 Haute Couture collection here.

photography. courtesy of Valentino
words. Patrick Clark