HELMUT LANG. SÉANCE DE TRAVAIL 1986–2005 / Excerpts from the MAK Helmut Lang Archive
With HELMUT LANG. SÉANCE DE TRAVAIL 1986–2005 / Excerpts from the MAK Helmut Lang Archive, the MAK presents the first comprehensive exhibition of Helmut Lang’s oeuvre, offering a renewed understanding of his contribution to culture. Based on the largest and only official public archive dedicated to his legacy—which has been part of the MAK Collection since 2011—the exhibition provides profound and unprecedented insight into Helmut Lang’s mindset and creative process.
Conceived as a mixed media presentation featuring large-scale, site-specific installations, the exhibition transcends the conventions of a classical fashion exhibition and traces how his radical vision in the years 1986–2005 transformed the perception of fashion, identity, and visual communication at a global scale.
With his intermedia approach, Lang challenged both established industry norms and societal conventions, fusing uncompromising rigor with a deeply human understanding. What emerged was a quietly radical stance grounded in loyalty to character and the courage to experiment. Anticipating ideas long before they entered the zeitgeist, he translated them onto a global stage while maintaining a critical distance from trend cycles, resulting in a body of work that remains conceptually and aesthetically relevant to this day.
The curatorial framework of the exhibition is rooted in the MAK Helmut Lang Archive, representing Lang’s notion of the séance de travail, or “work session,” as a process of continuous experimentation, refinement, and renewal. Langs pioneering strategies form a central narrative: Along the thematic chapters – IDENTITY, SPACE, SÉANCE DE TRAVAIL, MEDIA & CULTURAL PRESENCE, ARTIST COLLABORATIONS, and BACKSTAGE – the exhibition reflects both the complexity and the coherence of Lang’s work as part of a broader cultural narrative.
Working across Vienna, Paris, and New York, Lang redefined the role of fashion within architecture, art, media, and urban culture, establishing a distinctive aesthetic vocabulary that demonstrates his belief that fashion could function as an intellectual, sensorial, and cultural proposition rather than a product. In campaigns, urban interventions, flagship stores, and collaborations with artists working in various mediums, he merged the boundaries between creative disciplines and established a new form of visibility through relevance, prioritizing emotional resonance and anticipating contemporary discourse on authenticity, transparency, and the politics of representation.
Defined by interdisciplinary thinking, egalitarianism, cultural sensitivity, and personal commitment Helmut Lang did more than write fashion history. His oeuvre between 1986 and 2005 demonstrates how a rigorously articulated vision can shift social and individual paradigms, making him a pivotal figure and source of inspiration in culture for contemporary and future generations.
Images courtesy of Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna, Austria.