Marine Serre has collaborated with the Louvre Museum for her fall 2026 ready-to-wear collection, featuring couture pieces made from upcycled materials like puzzle pieces of the Mona Lisa. The designer skipped a traditional runway show to emphasize slow craftsmanship, presenting her work through a lookbook that blends art and sportswear. This marks her second partnership with the museum, following an upcycled tapestry coat in last year's Louvre Couture exhibition.
Marine Serre's fall 2026 collection draws on her ongoing dialogue with the Louvre, where she previously featured an upcycled tapestry coat in the museum's "Louvre Couture" exhibition. For this season, she created five one-of-a-kind couture pieces and a capsule line set to launch in April, utilizing unsold T-shirts from the Louvre gift store.
A standout item is a dress constructed from nearly 3,000 puzzle pieces depicting Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa," sewn together on a reinforced base and varnished, requiring 420 hours of labor. Serre explained her approach in a preview at her Paris headquarters: "My goal this year is to frame fashion and clothing as an art form, so that people stop looking at it like something that flies past. I wanted to put the clothes into context."
Having skipped runways for the past two seasons to prioritize meticulous making, Serre presented the collection via a lookbook photographed by Arash Khaksari. The images evoke stepping into a painting, inspired by social media's AI-animated masterpieces, with elements like puff-sleeved poet blouses, bustle gowns, and portrait necklines infused with sportswear details.
Technical fabrics integrate throughout: black jersey bodices on crisp white shirts, Neoprene corset belts on T-shirt tops, and transparent mesh panels on graphic trompe-l'œil gowns with faux fur trim. A pannier skirt design slips on like a second skin, combining black scuba tops with upcycled skirts from white shirts, T-shirts, or colorful silk scarves, padded at the hips. Other highlights include a tailored black jacket with a Renaissance neckline and a column dress made from 850 makeup brushes.
Serre emphasized transformation through effort: "It’s about taking things with little intrinsic value and showing how the time and human effort invested in each piece ultimately transforms it into a couture creation."
She plans to attend the Louvre's annual fundraising gala on Tuesday, with guests wearing her designs, noting the alignment with this year's Met Gala theme on fashion and art.