Happy New Year, 2026!
What We're Looking Forward to This Year

Happy New Year! As the first days of 2026 unfold, the cultural calendar is busy yet thoughtful: museums are unveiling ambitious exhibitions and the fashion world is charting its next chapter. Here at W Department, we are preparing to head to Paris Fashion Week later this week for the Men’s Fall-Winter 2026 collections. In this moment of recalibration, entering this new year trying to balance between excitement and uncertainty, optimism and hesitation, we find ourselves drawn to what endures: beauty and creation that speak not to trends, not to current events, but to long-term conviction.
The art world begins the year with a remarkable slate of exhibitions across Europe and beyond. From intimate retrospectives to explorations of modern masters at major institutions, 2026 promises both celebration and interrogation in equal measure. Whether through paint, sculpture, or immersive installation, artists continue to probe identity and place with renewed seriousness. We are especially excited for the 2026 Venice Biennale, Echolalia, a trio of Bjork’s immersive works at the National Gallery of Iceland, 1925-2025. One Hundred Years of Art Deco at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, which we missed last fall but hope to see before it closes in April, and Calder. Rêver en Équilibre, an Alexander Calder Retrospective at the Fondation Louis Vuitton.
We are also excited for some major museum exhibitions focusing on some of our favorite fashion houses. Last year, we were fortunate enough to attend the vernissage of Rick Owens: Temple of Love at the Palais Galliera in Paris. This year, we can’t wait for The Antwerp 6 at MoMu- Fashion Museum Antwerp and Azzedine Alaïa and Christian Dior, Two Masters of Haute Couture at the Azzedine Alaïa Foundation in Paris.
This past October, Paris Fashion Week offered early clues to the year ahead—chief among them a continued appetite for contrast: structure alongside freedom, heritage alongside reinvention. This approach resonates in luxury more broadly. The definition of luxury is shifting away from excess and toward discernment. In an era of constant availability, rarity is no longer about price or scarcity alone, but about clarity of vision. What stands out now is not the loudest statement, but the most resolved one— the piece, the space, or the idea that feels inevitable rather than forced.
This rich interplay echoes broader currents in fashion today: a turn toward authenticity over ornament, introspection over buzz—an aesthetic that feels especially resonant in an era searching for meaning beyond the ephemeral.
The Curated Edit
Today, we focus on expressions of Ann Demeulemeester’s Road to Never FW25 collection. Each piece feels like an idea worn rather than a trend chased. These garments reward consideration and promise longevity—a true hallmark of tasteful acquisition.



















