
At their Fall Winter 2025 Haute Couture presentation, Viktor&Rolf turned duality into performance. Titled ‘Angry Birds’, the collection featured fifteen mirrored pairs of looks, each a study in contrast, symmetry, and transformation. Across thirty all-black silhouettes, the designers choreographed an interplay of presence and absence, where volume became attitude and absence became declaration.
COUTURE COLLECTIONS
Each pair consisted of two technically identical garments: one exuberantly inflated with cascades of vividly colored feathers, the other featherless and bare, reduced to its unembellished form. In the first, feathers burst into form, electric blues, fiery reds, and sulfur yellows swirled into dramatic silhouettes, layered with custom headpieces by Stephen Jones. The second was stripped down: same cut, same construction, minus the spectacle. Devoid of volume, it read as its own quiet doppelgänger, a silhouette softened and deflated.

The juxtaposition was surgical in its precision. Viktor&Rolf offered more than visual trickery, they revealed how closely excess and subtlety are entwined. What begins as an explosion of theatrical grandeur gives way to intimacy. When the feathers fall away, so does the posturing. In their absence, the design becomes a whisper rather than a scream.
But the choice of feathers as structure, not decoration, is what pushed the collection into a more conceptual space. These weren’t traditional plumes; they were cruelty-free, fabric-based trompe-l’oeil creations that turned the decorative into the architectural. Referencing the legacy of plumassier Monsieur Lemarié, Viktor&Rolf treated the air between the feathers as vital as the feathers themselves. Their couture lived in that space, elastic, shapeshifting, performative.

The reference to their FW98–99 debut couture collection was not incidental. Then too, Viktor&Rolf experimented with grand forms stripped bare, testing what remains when scale is subtracted. But ‘Angry Birds’ pushed the idea further. The puffed silhouettes were not grotesque; they were on the verge of release, as if mid-transformation. Their dual presence suggested garments caught between stages, emotional and physical molting.
Completed with custom satin heels by Christian Louboutin, the looks held an eerie elegance. Despite their theatricality, they did not feel distant. The feathered versions were not just louder, hey were about to take flight. Their counterparts remained grounded, shadows of what they could become. In that tension, Viktor&Rolf revealed the paradox of haute couture: its ability to hold contradiction, to be both outlandish and deeply personal.

‘Angry Birds’ may sound like a provocation, but here it was also prophecy, these garments weren’t just angry, they were restless. Ready to escape the confines of spectacle, they dared to exist in both states at once.
