Black cashmere sweater; black leather pants; black leather waist belt with pouch.
A minimal set in black. The sweater's collar is like a travelling pillow, and the sleeves are divided into upper and
lower sections, only partly sewn together. The pants have fasteners sewn in on the fronts of the legs, with tapes
above the knees. This clearly shows the tendency in Helmut Lang's designs to create clothes part by part and then
join them together; a tendency that became even more distinct in later collections.
Lang comes from Austria, and presented his first Paris collection in 1986. At the time, he stressed a banality that
contrasted with the excessiveness of avant-garde fashion, and accepted reality of the body rather than seeking an
ideal body. By fusing the radical and the universal, Lang became one of the drivers of 1990s fashion. In 2002, he
made tape clothes such as a part or a fragment of jackets and vests, that could be interpreted either as pieces of
clothes or as accessories. Rather than clothes, it was almost as if he were presenting soon-to-disappear fragments or
vestiges of clothes, draped on the wearers' bodies.