
As fashion month fatigue settles heavily across the industry, with editors, buyers, and critics alike questioning the relentless pace of the circuit, Berlin Fashion Week emerges as a defiant counterpoint. The German capital continues to carve out space for designers who prioritize substance over spectacle, and MARKE’s Fall Winter 2026 collection, titled “THE OWL,” makes a compelling case for why this matters now more than ever.
Presented as part of BERLIN CONTEMPORARY, the collection takes its name from Minerva’s owl, the ancient symbol of wisdom that, according to Hegel, spreads its wings only at dusk. It’s a fitting emblem for a body of work that grapples with what the designer perceives as civilization’s drift toward a new dark age.
A Meditation on Misinformation
The collection’s conceptual foundation is bracingly direct: we live in an era where the entirety of human knowledge sits in our pockets, yet we increasingly choose ignorance. MARKE channels this disquiet into garments that speak of tension, restraint, and quiet resistance.

The designer draws a provocative parallel between our current moment and the pre-Enlightenment period, or perhaps more pointedly, the late Rococo era, when aristocratic excess and performative hedonism masked the tremors of impending revolution. The collection asks whether we are living through a similar inflection point, scrolling through pastel-filtered unreality while unrest builds beneath the surface.
Silhouette and Material Intelligence
Where previous seasons embraced romantic volume, “THE OWL” marks a decisive pivot toward control. Silhouettes are slimmer, more fitted, more disciplined, an aesthetic attempt to impose clarity amid chaos. Traces of volume remain, but they feel purposeful rather than indulgent.
EXPLORE FALL WINTER 2026 COLLECTIONS
The material palette reinforces this sobriety: Australian Merino wool, virgin wool layered with polka-dot tulle, cashmere, silk duchesse details, and striped cottons. These are substantial, refined textiles that demand attention without shouting for it.
Color operates in a similarly restrained register. Grey, black, and eggshell dominate, punctuated only by whispers of merlot and petrol. The effect is contemplative rather than dour, a collection dressed for serious times.

Symbols of Fading Excess
The most evocative elements arrive through MARKE’s use of tulle overlays, veils, and dried flowers, motifs that read as memento mori for an age of superficiality. These withering symbols of beauty suggest that the current moment’s excesses, like those of the Rococo, cannot sustain themselves indefinitely.
The collection also plays with the emergence of classical menswear, that historical moment when individuality surrendered to corporate uniformity. MARKE juxtaposes these references against late Rococo decadence, creating an eclectic dialogue between conformity and excess, reason and indulgence.
Poetry Grounded in Reality
“THE OWL” refuses the escapism that has characterized much of recent fashion. After last season’s romantic fantasy, this collection plants its feet firmly in the present. The poetry remains, MARKE is too thoughtful a designer to abandon it entirely, but it serves a different purpose here. This is fashion as appeal, as call to reflection.
In a season where many collections feel like exercises in brand maintenance, MARKE offers something increasingly rare: a genuine point of view, articulated through craft and concept in equal measure. Berlin Fashion Week, supported by the Berlin Senate Department for Economic Affairs and Fashion Council Germany, continues to provide the platform for exactly this kind of work.
Find more of the collection in our gallery:
The owl spreads its wings at dusk. Whether we’re witnessing twilight or the darkness before dawn remains the question MARKE leaves us to answer for ourselves.

















