Set against the dramatic gardens of a Roman villa, Dior’s Cruise 2026 show was more than a fashion presentation—it was performance art. And as ghosts mingled with models beneath the twilight sky, creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri and Dior Makeup’s Peter Philips delivered a hauntingly elegant vision of beauty rooted in simplicity, history, and luminous skin.
A Roman dream brought to life
For Dior’s Cruise 2026 collection, Maria Grazia Chiuri returned to her native Rome—and with it, she brought the spirit of Italian cinema, theater, and mythology to life. Held at the lavish Villa Albani Torlonia, the show unfolded like an immersive spectacle. Models moved through the estate’s sculpted gardens in a seamless choreography of couture and cruisewear, while actors in powdered wigs and period costumes—styled by the famed Tirelli costume house—drifted among the guests like specters from another time.
The show, titled Bella Confusione (“Beautiful Confusion”), referenced not just film, but the theatricality of life and memory itself. It was a sensory-rich homage to the Eternal City, layered with symbolism and reverence for its artistic history. Guests like Natalie Portman, Rachel Brosnahan, and Alexandra Daddario arrived in head-to-toe white, observing Chiuri’s all-white dress code and echoing the ethereal elegance of the models.
But as bold as the setting was, the beauty direction took a surprisingly quiet turn. According to Dior Makeup’s Creative and Image Director Peter Philips, the guiding theme backstage was restraint. “The environment is so rich—the music, the costumes, the interaction between models and actors,” he said. “We wanted the makeup to feel pure. Almost like marble statues coming to life.”
A delicate balance between life and afterlife
Philips described the evening as a performance blending the presence of the living with the ghosts of Rome’s past. “The ghosts are actors dressed in costumes from all periods—Roman to medieval, 18th-century to the 1930s,” he explained. “They walk among the audience, alongside the models. It’s all about an interplay between history and now, between memory and reality.”
That concept extended to the beauty looks, where romantic hair met minimalist makeup. Models wore braided chignons that mimicked Roman sculptures, while their faces were kept luminous and soft, devoid of harsh lines or heavy color. “We didn’t want anything ghostly or scary,” Philips said. “These girls are not spirits in the dark—they’re like statues kissed by light.”
The effect was modern and timeless all at once. With sculpted cheekbones, hydrated skin, and subtle touches of shimmer, the models became living embodiments of the villa’s marble artworks. Lace eye masks added an element of mystery—part ancient goddess, part Venetian masquerade—but never overwhelmed the look.
How to create a ‘barely there’ face with depth
Though the makeup appeared minimal from afar, it was executed with precision and layers of luxe Dior products designed to enhance rather than conceal. Philips began by prepping the models’ skin with Dior Eye Patches and Dior Capture Le Sérum, creating a plumped, refreshed canvas. He followed with Dior Forever Skin Perfect Foundation Stick, adding coverage that moved naturally with the skin.
To reflect light without sparkle, he tapped on Dior Forever Glow Luminizer in 06 Opal Sequin, a subtle highlighter that gave skin an inner radiance. “There’s a little glitter on the eyes, just so they don’t disappear under the lights,” Philips noted. That glow came courtesy of the Diorshow 5 Couleurs 557 Brown Cachemire palette, with its soft, pearly tones.
Brows were brushed and filled lightly with Diorshow Brow Styler and Diorshow On Set Brow Gel, while the waterline was subtly defined using Diorshow On Stage Crayon in 594 Brown—a rich, earthy tone that kept the eyes expressive but grounded. As for lips, Philips reached for Dior Addict Lip Glow Butter in 103 Toffee, a warm, non-pearlescent balm that added just a hint of tint and moisture. “We wanted something that felt juicy and natural, like a soft jelly finish,” he explained. “Toffee doesn’t compete—it just enhances.” Nails, too, followed suit: clean, short, and painted in Dior Vernis 100 Nude Look, a barely-there shade that completed the overall softness of the look.
Letting faces tell their own story
One of the most compelling aspects of Chiuri’s shows is her trust in the individuality of her models. “Maria Grazia is involved in casting,” said Philips. “She chooses strong, unique faces with presence—and that allows us to do less.”
Rather than using makeup to reshape or mask features, the Dior team focused on elevation and transparency. “This look doesn’t scream for attention,” Philips said. “It supports fashion. It stays in harmony with everything else.” It’s an approach that mirrors the values of the collection itself: thoughtful, grounded in tradition, and entirely contemporary.
In an industry often obsessed with excess, the pared-back beauty of Dior Cruise 2026 served as a reminder that impact can come from subtlety. In a garden where ghosts waltzed through centuries and fashion flirted with history, the models didn’t need bold lips or graphic liner to stand out. They simply glowed—like statues in motion, lit from within.