RIO’s Fall/Winter 2026 collection, A Poem & A Protest II, unfolds as the second chapter in a story first introduced last season — one that continues to explore identity through tension and contrast. This chapter leans further into duality, where softness and resistance meet glamour and grit. Plaid — now scaled up and deepened into winter palettes — anchors the collection, Pleated minis, metallic bikini tops, and draped separates are layered with bold outerwear and high-visibility accents. Reflective textiles capture flash and movement, radiating both defiance and glamour. Protection becomes both concept and construction. Quilted surfaces, sculptural puffer shoulders, trapper hats, and sharply structured coats suggest garments built for impact and endurance. Utility-driven elements — backpacks, sport closures, reinforced shapes — position the wardrobe as functional armor for the contemporary city. The message is clear: these are clothes designed not just to be worn, but to withstand.
Styling choices extend the narrative beyond aesthetics into symbolism. ACLU “ICE OUT” pins appear on select looks as understated but deliberate gestures of civic alignment. Traditional stone and obsidian necklaces rooted in Mexican cultural heritage are layered against tailored sets and polished coordinates, creating a dialogue between ancestry and modernity, refinement and urgency. The presentation itself rejected conventional runway distance. Staged at Jean’s as a live performance featuring Dominican musical artists Planta Industrial, the show blurred the lines between concert and catwalk. With Fall/Winter 2026, RIO continues to argue that identity is inherently plural — emotional and defiant, intimate and public-facing at once. A Poem & A Protest II does not frame fashion as escape, but as declaration: clothing as poetry, clothing as protest, clothing as presence.