
GENARO RIVAS ON BREAKING THE GLASS CEILING
UNVEILED AT LONDON FASHION WEEK AW26, THE PERUVIAN DESIGNER TURNS FRAGILITY INTO POWER; FUSING REBELLION AND SUSTAINABILITY TO CREATE A COLLECTION THAT REFUSES TO WAIT FOR PERMISSION. MAYA KALE SPEAKS TO THE DESIGNER.
Written by Maya Kale
Images Courtesy of Kvishal Official
Genaro Rivas’ AW26 collection, A Glass to Break, is unapologetically daring. Emerging designers today have no option but to grasp onto the finest of threads in order to climb up the ladder of success, and Rivas struck the balance between the turbulence and beauty of this world. Held in a compact studio in Knightsbridge, Rivas made sure to immediately set the tone for his collection. By using narrow beam lights and alternative metal music from bands such as ‘Deftones,’ it screamed ‘rebellion’ even before the show started.
“This collection comes from the heart and from the feelings of breaking into the industry”, says Rivas, and this is shown through his bold and strong silhouettes. Each garment held the weight of his message - denim with a shattered glass print, a mesh-lined dress with sharp, uneven glass-like cutouts that merge with soft toile towards the end - all showcase the beauty in breaking. Bold smoky eyes, and sharp makeup looks enhanced the cohesion of his looks as well. Rivas balanced body-contouring silhouettes with voluminous, fluid forms, evoking a mood that was simultaneously loud and defiantly free.



The collection narrates itself like a story, where Rivas addresses concepts such as fragility in a positive way - a notion that is usually suppressed and pushed down. Through soft, delicate materials like bright yellow and red bio-fur, contrasted with dresses fastened by exposed zippers and sewing pins, Rivas leans into the aesthetic of the unfinished. The pins reflect pain and fragility, while the soft fur and use of yellow reflect hope and resilience.
This is the first time Rivas has used accessories in his collection. Renowned artists such as Roberta Cucuza crafted the eye-catching headgears that mimicked halos with the reflective red translucent materials, reiterating the power lingering in the attire.

As an avid film and video game lover, I draw inspiration from stories like The Last of Us, a post-apocalyptic video game set in a world overrun by parasitic fungi. Where mushroom-like layers grow from bodies much like Bond’s 3D printing tactics.
Each model resembles their own character. She places small 3D-printed red horns between webs of clear, pen-drawn lines that scale down the bodices of one dress, completely moulded to movement. “I make kind of artwork for the body, and not just clothes to put on a person,” said Bond.

“Sustainability in fashion is how I live my life,” says Rivas. He aims to create designs that have stories attached to them – “when you know what materials are used, where they come from, it becomes a fully rounded product, and that’s what I aim to focus on.” ‘ A Glass to Break’ has consciously used materials that not only link back to Rivas’ roots - the bio-fur from Peruvian alpacas, for example - but also ones that reveal new layers to sustainable fashion-
biodegradable headpieces, bags made from plastic bottle sippers, raw materials sourced from the ocean - all contribute to creating an elevated fashion world that is not only impactful, but mindful.
Another key accessory used was a handcuff that mimicked glass shards - one that does not fully close - a metaphor for the strong grasp this invisible glass ceiling holds over emerging creatives, but the unclosed cuff gives room to shatter it - and that is exactly what Rivas is doing, one collection at a time. “I aimed to create a collection that’s not just beautiful, but raw”, says Rivas. This rawness is presented vividly in his work. It is claimed that this is his most daring collection to date, and it is unsurprisingly so. He has transformed struggle into a celebration that yells: I am proud of who I am, what I do, and I will make my mark, breaking the sound barriers of this said glass ceiling.

The alternate name for this collection is ‘Fractured Glass’ - transparently highlighting the impact of such a hyper-competitive industry on designers and creatives - fractured, tainted, breaking - but uses emotions and past experiences to transform struggle into a catalyst for reinvention. It celebrates growth and beautifully presents Rivas’ emotions through each material, accessory, and garment. Designers like Rivas are slowly paving the way for a reinvented fashion sphere, one that is strong in its intrinsic values and successfully creating breathtaking designs while committing to conscious environmental practices. “Peru is where I come from. It is my base that London now shapes”, says Rivas, not forgetting to appreciate and acknowledge the plethora of opportunities in a city saturated in style.
Ultimately, ‘A Glass to Break’ is not just about rebellion - It’s about reframing the entire narrative into a system that prefers passion over composure, being raw and loud over being pristine. He transparently reveals the tension of the fashion landscape while proving that the barriers can be pushed through. The collection is a declaration of his presence in this landscape, and is fuelled by intention, thought, and being transformative. Navigating between his Peruvian roots and the relentless pace of London, Rivas is creating a global dialogue that paves the way for new designers. It is a way for him to express that he is not waiting for space to be made for him - he will carve his way out, and shatter any obstacles on his own terms.