On the occasion of its fiftieth anniversary, the Fondazione Museo del Tessuto in Prato, in collaboration with the Azzedine Alaïa Foundation, announces the exhibition "Alaïa and Balenciaga. Sculptors of Form" as a special project. Conceived in 2020 by Olivier Saillard at the Fondation Alaïa in Paris to fulfill Hubert de Givenchy's desire for an exhibition that brings together two historic talents of French haute couture, the exhibition is making its Italian debut at the Museo del Tessuto in Prato.
Created in collaboration with the Azzedine Alaïa Foundation in Paris, chaired by Carla Sozzani, the exhibition Azzedine Alaïa and Cristóbal Balenciaga. Sculptors of Shape counts the French Embassy in Italy among its patrons, as well as the extraordinary participation of Balenciaga Archives in Paris, for an exceptional exhibition project coming to Italy for the first time.
The concept for the exhibition dates back to the Azzedine Alaïa Foundation in 2020, at the behest of Hubert de Givenchy. A few months after the passing of Azzedine Alaïa (Tunis 1935 – Paris 2017) and decades after that of Balenciaga (Getaria 1895 – Jávea 1972), as a great admirer of Balenciaga and a key figure in classical fashion, Givenchy shared his wish with the Alaïa Foundation to bring these two great talents together, both skilled experimenters with shapes and volumes that have profoundly marked the history of fashion.
Twenty-five creations by Azzedine Alaïa, considered one of the last couturiers, capable of mastering every stage in a garment’s creation, from design to tailoring, dialogue with as many garments by Cristóbal Balenciaga, in a timeless comparison.
Alongside the garments, the Textile Museum is exhibiting 12 original drawings by Balenciaga dated between 1950 and 1968 from Balenciaga Archives in Paris, shown in Italy for the very first time. The drawings, some of which include technical notes for tailoring and fabric samples, are accompanied by an equal number of original photos of the garments being worn, valuable and extraordinary records of the Spanish designer’s creative process.
As Azzedine recounts, when Maison Balenciaga closed for good in 1968, as a young up-and-coming designer, he was called upon by Mademoiselle Renée, the Maison’s historic deputy general manager, to choose a selection of Master Balenciaga’s creations, because only his hands would be able to rework and renew them without betraying them. The young Alaïa was so amazed by the shapes, the architecture of the cuts and the technical skill of each garment that he marked this encounter with Balenciaga’s work as the starting point for his own, and personally collected his most representative garments.
Both couturiers were passionate about sartorial construction and known for their perfectionism and ability to cut and sew with their own hands. Balenciaga’s research resulted in perfect formal elegance, while Alaïa’s highlighted precise sensuality. Balenciaga was a great innovator of forms and creator of wearable architecture, while Alaia wrapped and sculpted the body as if it were a second skin.
The exhibition is completed by a film on the life and work of Azzedine Alaïa made by Joe McKenna, fashion editor and stylist, and a never-before-seen video featuring the presentations of Balenciaga’s Haute Couture Summer 1960 and 1968 collections from Balenciaga Archives in Paris.
Azzedine Alaïa and Cristóbal Balenciaga. Sculptors of Shape
25 October 2025 – 3 May 2026
Museo del Tessuto
Prato - Italy



