On 30 January 1991, Claude Montana showed his haute couture collection for Lanvin in Paris, and somewhere in the middle of it Yasmeen Ghauri walked out in a silver mesh hood and a white bubble skirt. The look now reads like the exact midpoint of a career: still built around the glamazon silhouette that had made him the King of Shoulders, but lighter, younger, flirting with the sixties Space Age revival that the earliest nineties briefly tried to make happen.
This was as good as it was ever going to get for him.
The Lanvin job had arrived in 1990 on the back of a decade nobody else had owned quite as completely. Broad shoulders, sculpted leather, the body treated like architecture. Dynasty borrowed it. Wall Street borrowed it. Working Girl borrowed it. By the end of the eighties, Montana's silhouette wasn't just a look, it was the look: the default shape a woman took when a film or a TV show wanted to signal that she was about to walk into a boardroom and win. Alexander McQueen would later credit him openly. So would Riccardo Tisci, Olivier Theyskens, Anthony Vaccarello at Saint Laurent, and Willy Chavarria. The DNA was load-bearing.
His Lanvin work earned him two consecutive Golden Thimbles (the Dé d'Or, the closest thing French couture has to an Oscar). Critics who'd doubted whether a ready-to-wear designer could handle the discipline of a 19th-century atelier were reportedly astonished. Pale green iridescent trench coats. Patterned dresses with ribbon hats. Embroidered leather panels and, controversially at the time, beaded T-shirts on a couture runway, which was roughly the couture equivalent of serving crisps at a state banquet. He'd smuggled his own vocabulary into the house and made it work.
Then the decade happened around him.
By 1993, Helmut Lang had shown the anti-shoulder collection that basically ended the era. Margiela was deconstructing linings and wearing them as outerwear. Calvin Klein was doing the thing where nothing happens and everyone calls it genius, which my post on his 1980s advertising tried to take seriously on its own terms. Nirvana had put a cardigan on MTV. Kate Moss was on the cover of British Vogue in a slip. The culture's tolerance for theatrical power dressing had collapsed almost overnight, and Montana's response was essentially not to have one. He kept working in his own register. Retailers started dropping him. The House of Montana was in receivership by 1997.
The retrospective question is whether anything from that Spring 1991 collection crossed into the wider decade it opened. The honest answer is: not directly. The nineties that followed belonged to Prada nylon, Miuccia's ugly sandals, Jil Sander trousers, and the kind of Calvin Klein minimalism that Azzedine Alaïa had already quietly predicted three autumns earlier in a roomful of black. Even Mugler, Montana's closest rival in theatrical silhouette, was being pushed toward the costume-piece end of his archive. Valentino had his own reckoning the same year, managing it more gracefully because he never really needed the shoulder to be doing the talking.
What survived, survived filtered. The militarised tailoring and exaggerated shoulder came back through McQueen in 1996, through Balenciaga under Ghesquière, through Tisci at Givenchy in the 2010s, through Saint Laurent under Vaccarello now. The debt is real. It just took twenty-five years to be paid in a currency anyone still recognised as spendable.
By 1994, the same silhouettes that had made him a god in 1988 looked like costume in a room that had decided it wanted clothes. It wasn't that Montana had stopped being good. It was that the weather had turned, and he was still dressed for the last one.
Sources:
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The Disappearing Designer: What Happened to Claude Montana — Vanity Fair
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The Legacy of Claude Montana, the Power Dressing King of the 80s — Maria Hedian
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Claude Montana, '80s Fashion Titan, Dies at 76 — W Magazine
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Claude Montana — Wikipedia