A sculpture of Venus occupies a light-filled room off a long statue-lined hall inside Thorvaldsens Museum.
She stands there, disrobed, gripping her clothes with one hand and an apple with the other. As I sit there waiting for the show to start, my eyes smooth over the soft drape of fabric and the delicate curls on her head. It’s difficult not to be awed by the work of Bertel Thorvaldsen, a 19th-century sculptor, one of Europe’s greatest, to whom the museum is dedicated. It’s hard to look away from the ornate barreled ceilings and mosaic floors. From the striking reliefs lining the walls. From the soaring windows and the heavenly light pouring through them. But as soon as the percussive soundtrack kicks the day’s event off, Cmmn Swdn’s fall-winter 2025 collection quickly becomes the object of all attention.
In this intimate space (I’m seated in one of the many smaller gallery rooms at the museum), the opening look sticks to the foundational necessities of formalwear: a black tailored blazer and loose-fitting trousers, teamed up with a crisp white shirt, collars pointed and elongated. It’s disarmingly simple and yet clearly constructed with immense care. You can tell. The pink fur clutch it’s paired with is exquisite. So is the following look — another two-piece with fuller shoulders and a curved, nipped-in waist. It’s presented in a warm, buttery yellow shade that perfectly complements the museum’s ochre-colored walls. This is tailoring at its finest — of form, cut, and drape.