Fall 2024 Ready-To-Wear Show

With collections setting the pace of the fashion seasons, Fall constitutes a particular period of reflection for Maria Grazia Chiuri, and an ongoing questioning that is constantly renewed. Each time, the wardrobe is revitalized by a series of pieces of which their unique construction, cuts, materials, and creativity have what it takes to meet all women’s needs. This Dior line is an opportunity to pay homage to New York, the metropolis that was given – as a gift from the French to the United States at the end of the 19th century – a statue which has since become the symbol of this incredible city. In Christian Dior's autobiography1, the chapter dedicated to his Paris-New York trip opens up a dialogue between the style capitals that Maria Grazia Chiuri highlights in two key prints: the Statue of Liberty and the Eiffel Tower that flourish in large format on numerous models.

 

The bridge between both cultures is Marlene Dietrich, a charismatic, contrarian actress, attached to Dior, in life and on screen. Maria Grazia Chiuri drew inspiration from her to build a collection that fuses the Dior silhouette with the diva's phantasmagorical presence and boyish allure. The tweeds used came directly from a selection of English menswear fabrics. In his Petit dictionnaire de la mode, Monsieur Dior wrote: "In the last few years, tweeds have extended their use even for dressy suits. I think they are extremely elegant. To wear them in the country is a ‘must’. At one time, you could only get tweeds in a rather heavy weight but now you can get them in all weights and qualities and colors. 2” Marlene Dietrich's masculine suits provoked scandal, asserting, let us not forget, a woman's right to choose her attire as she pleases, a tie or a sleeveless vest, for instance: so many emblems that complement each other. Jackets are paired with wide-leg pants or below-the-knee pencil skirts.

 

The precious and sometimes very light dresses, recalling the style of the '40s, give a glimpse of the lingerie that turns out to be an essential part of the outfit. Fabrics such as hammered satin, crushed velvet and crepe are reinterpreted in a contemporary spirit. Some of the lace-encrusted slip dresses, often revealed beneath large, lined coats, are made from quilted nylon featuring the cannage motif. The embroidery evokes brooches and echoes the signature codes so dear to the founding-couturier: the star, the lily of the valley, the clover and the bee. The lace collars become veritable structural intarsias. As for knitwear, a virtuoso level of inventiveness has allowed multiple facets of its extraordinary plurality to be developed.

 

The Dior Fall 2024 collection, unveiled on April 15, 2024, in New York, embodies a range of possibilities that celebrates the meeting of cultures. A conversation about freedom that gives shape and substance to whatever each woman chooses to be.

 

1 Christian Dior and I, Christian Dior, Vuibert Publishing House.

Christian Dior's Little Dictionary Of Fashion, Christian Dior, Cassell & Company Ltd, London, 1954, translated into French in 2007 as an appendix to the catalogue Dior 60 Years of Style.

Looks

1234567890123456789/77

A Unique Creative Dialogue

On the occasion of the Dior Fall 2024 show, an exciting encounter between artist Suzanne Santoro and the Claire Fontaine collective was woven in the heart of the Brooklyn Museum. An enthralling exchange in the name of freedom and women's empowerment.

No Dior No Dietrich!

A fervent admirer of Christian Dior and a loyal customer of the House both in life and on the silver screen, style icon Marlene Dietrich is one of the major inspirations for this Dior Fall collection. A captivating wardrobe that could be the famous actress's in 2024, with a new twist, reinvented by Maria Grazia Chiuri's virtuoso imagination.

© Melinda Triana

© Anastasia Duvallie

Paris-New York, Berlin-Broadway

In a prodigious masculine-feminine interplay, the Dior Fall 2024 collection pays tribute to the two fashion capitals so dear to the House: Paris, emblem of elegance and haute couture, the cradle of which is 30 Montaigne, and New York, which fascinated Monsieur Dior right from 1947, with its vertiginously vertical architecture and peerless collective effervescence. The silhouettes celebrate the inimitable aura of Marlene Dietrich, incarnation of that fascinating, seminal duality. From suits and tailoring with a superb twist on tweed or tailcoat spirit, to velvet evening gowns, modernized, sparkling divinely with dance-floor and neo-Broadway odes to glamour. From casual trouser outfits magnifying the sportswear attitude, to a triptych of marvelous leather pieces – a seamless pea coat with lining punctuated by the Eiffel Tower motif opening the show, a jumpsuit, and an aviator-biker jacket brandishing the star-spangled American flag fused with that of France on its back –, these exceptional creations affirm the irresistibly hybrid facets of the wardrobe, at once timeless and ultra-contemporary.

© Anastasia Duvallie

Marlene For Ever

The hat-tie-glasses combo reinvents Dietrich's* unique allure once again, and is the perfect accompaniment to white shirts and calfskin gloves embroidered with bees that seem to flutter on the hands. These essential accessories are also punctuated, in cabaret spirit, by embroidered fringes, as so many odes to the "movement of life" celebrated by Monsieur Dior at each of his défilés. As for bags, from the Dior Book Tote to the Lady Dior, they play the card of pared-down purity, quintessential elegance, or that of US and Paris-New York inspirations, flags and motifs harmonized with a trench coat or sportswear ensemble, mixing casualness with the House's cherished codes. Platform shoes, revisited lace-up espadrilles and embroidered footwear are more inspired than ever by the actress, echoing her avant-garde masculine-feminine and Riviera-Hollywood dualities.

 

* Who, incidentally, purchased her ties (as well as her pajamas) from Dior Monsieur!

Backstage

© Emma Anderson

Virtuoso Symbioses

Between heritage and modernity, the looks of the Dior Fall 2024 collection deploy exceptional savoir-faire of constantly renewed inventiveness. An ode to plural creativity.

© Melinda Triana

Reflecting the powerful ties that unite Paris and New York, this signature motif, already iconic, is deployed with infinite precision on the collection's looks. Excellent savoir-faire to be (re)discovered via video.

Final touches to the looks of the Dior Fall 2024 line and a tribute to Marlene's inimitable style, the irresistibly 1950s berets are made in the Laulhère ateliers (established in south-west France as early as 1840), using marvelous traditional craftsmanship. A captivating dialogue sealed by the signature of both Houses featured in the lining of the unique creation.

© Melinda Triana © Maison Laulhere

© Melinda Triana

Dreamed up by Christian Dior for the 1949 spring-summer haute couture collection, and chosen for the filming of Stage Fright – during which Marlene Dietrich fired her famous "No Dior, No Dietrich!" at Alfred Hitchcock – the Accacias jacket is ingeniously reinterpreted by Maria Grazia Chiuri for the Dior Fall 2024 line. A stunning couture journey through past, present and future, to be experienced in images.

TM & © 2024 M. Dietrich Inc. All Rights Reserved