Design

Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026: Underground Shift

Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026 brings Matthieu Blazy to New York’s Bowery subway, blending couture craft, pop culture and a bold new vision of luxury.

Por: Angela Leon Cervera
Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026
Métiers d’art 2026 collection Matthieu Blazy for CHANEL. Photo: @chanelofficiall

When Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026 took over an unused stretch of New York’s Bowery subway, it felt like a portal opening under Rue Cambon. Matthieu Blazy, now artistic director for all fashion collections, used his first Métiers d’Art outing to signal a clear change of gear for the house. 

Instead of palatial sets and historic temples, guests descended into a real platform at 168 Bowery, complete with a stationed train and recorded subway announcements. The result was a collision of elevated craft, everyday commuters and cinema level staging that re-framed Chanel as a participant in urban life, not just a distant icon.

Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026
Métiers d’art 2026 collection Matthieu Blazy for CHANEL. Photo: @chanelofficial

How Does Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026 Rewrite The House Codes?

Blazy’s collection plays with archetypes of the subway, office worker, tourist, downtown eccentric, instead of archetypes of aristocracy. Models walked in tweeds, bouclés and tailoring that are deeply Chanel, but styled with souvenir style T-shirts, polished streetwear and pieces that look almost thrifted at first glance. 

 

The technical showstopper is the so called lingerie denim. What seems like worn in jeans or workwear is in fact feather light silk, beaded and finished to mimic denim grain and fading. Even leopard tweeds and shimmering jacquards are hand woven by Lesage, while minaudières shaped like a coffee cup or New York apple turn the handbag offer into portable pop art.

Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026
Métiers d’art 2026 collection Matthieu Blazy for CHANEL. Photo: @chanelofficial
Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026
Métiers d’art 2026 collection Matthieu Blazy for CHANEL. Photo: @chanelofficial

Why Does The Bowery Subway Matter For Chanel’s New Era?

Showing underground is more than a clever location. It directly contrasts Karl Lagerfeld’s Met show at the Temple of Dendur, swapping pharaoh glamour for turnstiles, tile grime and wooden benches.  Blazy has called the subway a vortex where everything connects. The message is clear: the Chanel woman does not watch the city from a limousine, she moves through it. 

 

Casting supports that story. Bhavitha Mandava opened the show, becoming the first Indian model to lead a Chanel Métiers d’Art runway in New York. Kristen Stewart described the collection as feeling like “breaking the system,” a reaction that perfectly captures the tension between coded luxury and lived city chaos.

What Do Superman Knitwear And A$AP Rocky Say About Luxury’s Future?

One of the most talked about looks was a cashmere sweater that fuses the Superman S shield with the Chanel double C, styled in a Clark Kent inspired reveal under a shirt and blazer. It is both a direct collaboration with DC Comics and a wink to the idea that everyone is the hero of their own commute.

 

A$AP Rocky, now a Chanel ambassador, has already worn a version of the knit, blurring the line between womenswear, celebrity styling and soft power marketing. Paired with animal head flap bags and cartoonish minaudières, the piece shows how the house uses camp, humor and shareable visuals without sacrificing the obsessive craft of le19M’s artisan network.

Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026
Métiers d’art 2026 collection Matthieu Blazy for CHANEL. Photo: @chanelofficial

Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026 feels like a stress test for the Chanel myth in real time. In the Bowery subway, couture level textiles share space with I Love NY tees, leopard tweed and a superhero logo. Some see chaos, others see honesty. What is undeniable is the precision of the making and the strategic clarity behind the noise.

 

By taking Métiers d’Art underground, Blazy gives Chanel friction again. The collection invites a client who is comfortable with contradiction, who wants intelligence, humor and difficulty woven into their tweed. In a crowded luxury market, that appetite for complexity may be the house’s sharpest competitive edge.

FAQ – Chanel’s Bowery Experiment, Decoded

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