Willy Chavarria redefines resistance through fashion in Paris

In a charged and unforgettable Spring 2025 runway show in Paris, designer Willy Chavarria delivered more than just a fashion statement. Through bold silhouettes, personal storytelling, and a powerful political message, Chavarria fused art and activism to confront injustice while celebrating humanity. It was fashion as protest, memory, and radical love.

A summons to humanity

Before a single model stepped onto the runway, the message was clear: this was not just a show — it was a statement. Guests invited to Willy Chavarria’s Spring 2025 presentation in Paris received envelopes modeled after U.S. immigration summons, commanding them to “Open Immediately.” But what lay inside wasn’t a bureaucratic threat — it was a declaration. Instead of fear, the letter affirmed the guest’s “Right to Exist” and welcomed them to a “Presentation of Humanity.”

willy chavarria menswear spring summer 2026

That subversion of violence into vulnerability, of systems into symbols, set the tone for what unfolded next: 35 men, dressed simply in white T-shirts and shorts made in collaboration with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), entered the red-carpeted runway. They silently walked, then knelt, heads bowed — echoing the positions forced upon people in prisons and immigration detention centers. In that gesture, Chavarria bridged the distance between performance and protest.

This moment wasn’t theater — it was testimony. It was a confrontation with brutality, particularly the ongoing abuses in Salvadoran prisons and the systemic dehumanization of immigrants across the U.S. border. For Chavarria, the runway isn’t an escape from reality — it’s a place to face it head-on.

Huron and the heart of the collection

Titled “Huron,” the Spring 2025 collection is named after Chavarria’s hometown in California’s Central Valley — a region steeped in farm labor, immigrant communities, and quiet resilience. But Huron, as Chavarria imagined it here, is not just a place. It’s an origin story, a cultural memory, a reclamation of identity.

willy chavarria menswear spring summer 2026

Soundtracked by “California Dreamin’” and Vivir Quintana’s “Te Mereces Un Amor” (“You Deserve a Love”), the collection took Chicano pride and reinterpreted it through an elevated lens. Styled by Carlos Nazario, the clothes recalled familiar American uniforms — corporate, athletic, carceral — but each was distorted, exaggerated, or reassembled to challenge what we think we know. A coral nylon tracksuit layered over a pink shirt and sweatshirt became a visual contradiction: softness wrapped in athletic aggression. A woman’s ensemble — a dandelion yellow top and skirt — featured padded shoulders and a tightly cinched waist, suggesting both strength and fragility. Throughout the show, silhouettes were bold, almost sculptural, evoking a kind of emotional armor.

Veterano shirts, structured dresses, and boxy shorts reflected Chavarria’s ongoing homage to Chicano fashion, filtered through his personal and political lens. And working closely with his head of design, Rebecca Mendoza, he infused the pieces with cinematic drama inspired by filmmakers Pedro Almodóvar and Wong Kar-wai — storytellers who, like Chavarria, find the extraordinary in the everyday.

Fashion as resistance, fashion as love

willy chavarria menswear spring summer 2026

Chavarria’s work has always walked the line between romanticism and rebellion, but in Paris, he crystallized a vision of fashion as resistance — not through slogans, but through craftsmanship, curation, and presence. His garments do not merely clothe the body; they insist on its right to be seen, respected, and remembered.

Where other designers might dabble in politics as aesthetic, Chavarria makes it personal. Whether channeling the dignity of his Chicano upbringing or the violence of incarceration systems, he transforms lived experience into visual poetry. His work refuses detachment. It is raw, emotional, and disarmingly sincere.

By using beauty to confront brutality — and tenderness to respond to terror — Chavarria reminded Paris (and the world) that fashion is not neutral. It never has been. Every cut, every fabric, every walk down the runway is a choice. And Chavarria’s choice is clear: to use his platform not just to show clothes, but to show courage.

A future shaped by humanity

willy chavarria menswear spring summer 2026

If Chavarria’s Spring 2025 show felt like a call to action, that’s because it was. His invitation didn’t just ask for attendance — it asked for attention, reflection, and empathy. It demanded that fashion be more than a spectacle. It asked us to remember the people we don’t see on runways: the detained, the displaced, the profiled, the silenced. And yet, amid all the heaviness, Chavarria offered something even more powerful: hope. The hope that art can heal. The hope that identity can be armor. The hope that even within systems of oppression, there are ways to reclaim power — through community, through creativity, through love.

As the final looks left the runway and the music faded, the audience didn’t just leave having seen a fashion show. They left with a message stitched into every seam: you deserve a love, and a life, that honors your full humanity.

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