{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/63e207f6b455cc0011e1e7a5/69270634caf6efa703ac7724?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"#35 Marlies Wirth","description":"<p>Today on <em>The Art Bystander</em>, I speak with <strong>Marlies Wirth</strong>, Curator for Digital Culture and Head of the Design Collection at the MAK in Vienna, about one of the most quietly radical figures of late-20th- and early-21st-century culture: Helmut Lang. Our conversation turns not to his later sculptural practice, but to the <em>architecture of a legacy</em> that reshaped how we understand design, communication, identity, and the very idea of what a fashion house could be.</p><p><br></p><p>The MAK’s new exhibition, <a href=\"https://www.mak.at/en/exhibitions/exhibition?ausstellung_id=1736149800818\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\"><strong><em>Excerpts from the MAK Helmut Lang Archive</em></strong></a> — running 10.12.2025 → 03.05.2026 — reflects on the years 1986–2005, a period in which Lang’s vision dissolved the boundaries between disciplines. His work unfolded across clothing, graphics, architecture, staging, branding, and digital experimentation — not as separate gestures, but as parts of a single cultural language. Long before he stepped away from fashion, Lang had already begun to operate like an artist moving across mediums, using every surface as a site of meaning.</p><p><br></p><p>This retrospective reveals how deeply his ideas anticipated the world we now take for granted. It recalls the moment he livestreamed a runway before the internet had become a stage; the years when he turned New York itself into an extension of his voice; the way his presentations and stores became environments rather than commercial spaces. Lang’s legacy is not simply a story of minimalism or aesthetic restraint — it is a study in how form can become communication, and how identity can be constructed with both precision and quiet intensity.</p><p><br></p><p>In speaking with Marlies, the past becomes newly vivid: not nostalgic, but architectural. We explore how Lang’s decisions — from the shape of a jacket to the rhythm of a campaign, to the destruction of his own archive — can be understood as part of a larger narrative about authorship, memory, and the courage to redefine oneself.</p><p><br></p><p>This episode looks back at the cultural landscape Helmut Lang helped build, and the echoes of his vision that continue to structure how we see and experience the world today.</p>","author_name":"Roland-Philippe Kretzschmar"}