
Anthony Vaccarello sets the tone for Saint Laurent Men’s Summer 2026 collection with a shift in atmosphere. He trades darkness for dry daylight. The Bourse de Commerce in Paris hosts the show, anchored by clinamen, an installation by Céleste Boursier-Mougenot. In a circular basin, porcelain bowls drift and collide across still water, leaving behind invisible paths. The sound resonates without orchestration. The collection follows a similar rhythm: precise, quiet, and unforced.
Vaccarello frames the collection between Paris and Fire Island, in a moment that pauses movement. He evokes a place where desire speaks its own visual language and where escape translates into exacting elegance. This point of reference traces back to a generation of artists, Stanton, Angus, Ellis, whose work gave visibility to what remained unsaid. The show nods to Yves Saint Laurent’s own retreat in 1974, not as a symbol of withdrawal, but as a pivot toward new creation.


The clothing reflects restraint without hesitation. Shapes skim the frame without holding tight. Extended shoulders and cinched waists create tension, but never constriction. Silk and nylon move fluidly across the body, forming structure without stiffness.
Vaccarello avoids excess and keeps the lines direct. Silhouettes appear sculpted through clarity, not volume. Each look feels deliberate but never showy. Shorts recall pieces once worn by a young Yves Saint Laurent, not as a quote, but as a recurring form. The reference disappears. What stays is the shape, reintroduced without commentary.

Color carries the tone forward. The palette stays low and sun-drenched, sand, salt, pale ochre, dry moss, pool blue. These shades drift across the garments the way the porcelain bowls drift across water: unforced and steady.
Vaccarello removes any trace of theatricality. He avoids artificial glow, choosing full presence under dry, afternoon light. This rupture from the expected runway atmosphere allows the garments to exist without excess.

This season doesn’t build on memory or nostalgia. Vaccarello sidesteps homage. He doesn’t quote the archive. Instead, he picks up the line where it left off. The 1974 withdrawal becomes a quiet pivot. What began there, he continues now.
