Can fashion be transformed into a work of art? The Victoria & Albert Museum’s upcoming exhibition, Schiaparelli: Fashion Becomes Art, answers with an emphatic yes. From March to November 2026 at the South Kensington venue, it invites visitors to explore the radical blend of surrealism, couture, and collaboration that defined both Elsa Schiaparelli’s revolutionary work and her enduring legacy.
Celebrating surrealist spectacle
Elsa Schiaparelli redefined couture by fusing fashion with the surreal. Her collaborations with Salvador Dalí resulted in iconic pieces like the lobster dress and the skeleton gown—garments that were less about embellishment and more about making shocking statements. These creations blurred boundaries between clothing, sculpture, and performance, inviting viewers to question what fashion could become.
The V&A’s exhibition will spotlight these masterpieces, presenting over 200 archival items—haute couture pieces, jewelry, perfume bottles, even sculptures. Many of these highlights will be displayed alongside works by Dalí, Picasso, Cocteau, and Man Ray, underscoring the cross‑disciplinary nature of Schiaparelli’s creative vision.
Tracing a legacy of artistic alliances
Schiaparelli thrived on collaboration. She co‑created embroidered coats with Jean Cocteau and Lesage in 1937, and later cast her surreal universe into wearable art through theatrical partnerships. This openness made her revolutionary—not just a designer, but a cultural provocateur who pushed fashion into museums and galleries.
The retrospective revisits her London branch’s experiments—often overlooked in discussions of her career—revealing a woman engaged with both high society and avant‑garde circles. With over two hundred historic objects, the show traces her transformation of everyday objects into whimsical artifacts that were equal parts wit and wonder.
Linking past and present couture
The exhibition isn’t purely retrospective. It also examines how Daniel Roseberry, Schiaparelli’s current creative director, channels her spirit in the modern era. Roseberry’s recent couture shows—including the 2021 sheath dress debuted in the exhibition—demonstrate how contemporary couture continues Schiaparelli’s legacy of drama and imagination.
Powerhouse women like Beyoncé, Zendaya, and Dua Lipa have stepped into Roseberry’s reimagined silhouettes, proving that Schiaparelli’s language of bold shapes and gilded ornament still resonates on today’s red carpets. The show traces this lineage—how vintage surrealism quietly informs tomorrow’s glamour.
A cultural event in the grand tradition of the V&A
Following in the footsteps of Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams and Gabrielle Chanel: Fashion Manifesto, the V&A is once again staging a blockbuster fashion exhibition. Schiaparelli: Fashion Becomes Art will open on March 21, 2026, and run through November 1 in the Sainsbury Gallery—a curated homage to couture as spectacle and intellect.
The museum emphasizes the scale of the loans as “unprecedented,” reinforcing its status as guardian of fashion history. By bringing together costumes, accessories, archival documents, and rare artifacts, the exhibition offers a multisensory immersion into the house’s surreal universe—parked firmly at the intersection of politics, culture, and creativity.
Surrealism, reinvigorated
The V&A’s Schiaparelli exhibition isn’t just about looking back—it’s about rediscovering how fashion can challenge, provoke, and enchant. In charting the couture of a woman who dressed like an artwork, and a legacy rebooted for a new generation, the museum invites us to see clothing as cultural commentary.
From lobster motifs to modern red carpet gowns, Fashion Becomes Art reminds us that fashion isn’t peripheral—it’s central. And in Schiaparelli’s universe, clothing wasn’t decoration—it was revolution.