
The Business of Fashion Podcast Inside Dries Van Noten’s Venice Manifesto
Apr 30, 2026
Dries Van Noten, Belgian designer known for four decades of independent, craft-led fashion, shares his Venice reinvention. He discusses leaving the runway calendar for a self-directed rhythm. He describes turning Palazzo Pisani Moretta into a living lab for craftsmanship, curating makers and programs. He frames beauty as a form of protest and a way to preserve and celebrate artisanal skills.
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Reclaiming Creative Rhythm Outside The Fashion Calendar
- Dries reclaimed time by leaving the fashion calendar and creating a new, self-directed rhythm.
- He calls Venice life busier but freer, where nobody dictates deadlines and projects respond to human intuition, not industry timing.
Venice Made Dries More Social
- Moving to Venice made Dries more social and connected; he values easy evenings, aperitivos and chance meetings.
- He contrasts busy Belgian fashion life with Venice's walkable sociality and layered population of Venetians, students and internationals.
A Palazzo As Living Laboratory
- The Palazzo Pisani Moretta functions as a living lab where historic craftsmanship meets contemporary projects.
- Dries felt initial overwhelm but then recognised intact 18th-century decoration and archival documentation that made the building a custodial responsibility.

