
Dolce&Gabbana presented its 2026 Alta Sartoria collection at the Teatro Antico of Taormina, during a five-day program devoted to Alta Gioielleria, Alta Moda and Alta Sartoria. The house placed Sicily at the center of the occasion, using two powerful cultural references to guide the evening: the painted Sicilian cart and Cavalleria Rusticana. They connected color, opera, community and sartorial precision across the dinner and presentation.
COUTURE COLLECTIONS
The Alta Sartoria dinner paid tribute to the Sicilian cart, one of the island’s most recognizable forms of folk art. Its painted panels carry knights, saints, heroes, battles and legends, turning a practical vehicle into a moving record of local traditions. Dolce&Gabbana drew from this visual language to shape an evening filled with art, fashion, music, food and fragrance in Taormina’s Public Gardens.
Each color carried a specific association. Red recalled the lava of Mount Etna. Yellow evoked the Sicilian sun and golden sands. Blue referred to the island’s clear waters, while green reflected citrus groves and rich gardens. Sicilian cuisine extended the same chromatic energy across the dinner. Within the garden’s fairy-tale structures, the cart became the central image for a theatrical experience that centered memory, place and imagination.
The presentation then moved to Cavalleria Rusticana, a work closely tied to Sicilian ideas of honor, passion and fate. Giovanni Verga created the story, and Pietro Mascagni later shaped it into one of the defining works of Verismo and Italian opera. Its characters act through love, desire, jealousy and honor, giving the drama an emotional force that suits Dolce&Gabbana’s view of Sicily.


At the Teatro Antico, the house turned the stage into a late 19th-century Sicilian square. Farmers, cart drivers, fishermen, shepherds and nobles occupied the same scenic space. Their presence created a community where social roles, ritual and memory met through action. The production erased the distance between performance and daily life, allowing the opera’s tensions to enter the setting before the collection appeared.

Alta Sartoria entered this scene through sculpted silhouettes, embroidery, velvet and precise construction. The clothes responded to the opera’s intensity and to the character of a place where beauty carries social and emotional meaning. Each look approached elegance through the relationship between aristocratic dress and popular tradition.
The event returned to a central idea: in Sicily, honor lives through gestures, promises, silence and belonging. Dolce&Gabbana translated that idea into clothing and performance, placing the 2026 Alta Sartoria collection inside a cultural setting where opera, folk art and the island’s visual language guided every scene.
















