Milano Fashion Week FW26.27: entertainment or pragmatism?
Ready-to-wear: analysing what the point of fashion shows today is
Milano Fashion Week FW26.27 has just started, and with it a tension that feels impossible to ignore: entertainment or pragmatism.
For years, the runway has been a stage for spectacle — immersive sets, viral moments, emotional crescendos. But this season opens under a different mood. One that feels more rational. More measured. Perhaps more urgent.
The debut of Maria Grazia Chiuri at Fendi seems to crystallise this dichotomy. (Watch the video here).
A collection precise and controlled. Well-made, wearable garments. No excess. No overt dream. And no attempt to manufacture awe.
To Business of Fashion, she stated:
“I’m not an entertainment designer. It’s not important to create something for one shot, to surprise someone. Otherwise I would do a performance. This is another job.”
And she added:
“We have to be pragmatic. It’s time — it’s really time if we want to move to the future of this industry.”
Her words draw a clear line. Fashion design is not performance art. Surprise is not the goal. Pragmatism is not a compromise — it is a position.
Even trade headlines reflect this shift. Pambianco titled its coverage: “When pragmatism prevails over emotion.” A phrase that reads less like criticism and more like a diagnosis.
Perhaps Chiuri was not appointed to entertain. And if Fendi had been looking for spectacle, they would not have chosen her. This feels deliberate. Which brings us to a larger question: what is the point of a fashion show today?
If the majority of consumers buy mass-market clothing, how many will ever wear garments conceived for the runway? If fashion shows are no longer primarily about dressing bodies, what are they about?
Narrative? Positioning? Investor reassurance? Cultural relevance?
Final thoughts
If Chiuri is right, perhaps the point is viability. Not to create a viral moment. Not to chase wonder for its own sake. But to demonstrate that these clothes can exist in the real world — and sustain a house, a workforce, a business model.
The show becomes less fantasy, more proof of concept. But can a fashion show be matter-of-fact and still matter? Or is pragmatism itself becoming a kind of statement — a deliberate anti-spectacle in a spectacle-saturated world?
If the industry truly stands at a turning point — “it’s time,” as Chiuri says — then perhaps a rational debut is not the absence of vision. Perhaps it is a recalibration.
As the Milano Fashion Week FW26 begins, that tension — entertainment or pragmatism — feels less theoretical and more structural.
But maybe the real question is not whether fashion should entertain or be pragmatic.
Maybe the question is: what does responsibility look like on a runway today?
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