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Issey Miyake Imagines Clothes With a Will of Their Own at Paris Fashion Week
Thomas Adamson READ TIME: 2 MIN.
Issey Miyake ’s spring 2026 show at Paris Fashion Week posed a question: what if clothing were alive?
Booming electronics inside the Centre Pompidou venue Friday accompanied an opening of crisp monochrome shirts and high-waisted trousers, shoulders drawn upward into a compact line, as if shrugging to the guests.
The concept arrived quickly and clearly: in this collection the wearer served the garment’s will, not the other way round.
Silhouettes remapped the body — trousers integrated sleeve-like panels at the sides that impacted the model's stance, and single-sheet wraps and supple faux leathers seemed to “grow” around the torso. A netted, scuba-like look packed with toylike objects turned accumulation into profile, as if the clothes themselves consumed and imposed contour.
Jackets with displaced openings forced new ways of entering and moving. Black-and-white tailoring stayed taut while shoulders lifted seemingly of their own accord, creating a springy, insouciant line.
Branded shoe boxes telegraphed the ongoing footwear collaboration as models circled a DJ in the round, but on the body the idea was autonomy: garments that oriented posture, choreographed gait, and treated the air between cloth and skin as living volume.
Founded by Issey Miyake in 1970 in Tokyo, the iconic famous house became famous for reframing the concept of fashion as material engineering — innovative pleating, paper and washi blends, single-piece construction — yielding light garments with sculptural force. Under current designer Satoshi Kondo, that legacy continues in movement-driven form and an ongoing dialogue with art and performance.
At Pompidou, those signatures read cleanly: weightless volume, precise cutting, textures that shifted with motion, reinforced by a live soundscape that treated textiles as active matter.
The caveat is familiar. Concept occasionally edged toward prop theater — the boxes, the stuffed netting — and risks overshadowing everyday use. Commercial clarity can blur when silhouettes impose rather than accommodate.
Even so, this was among the label’s more fashion-forward recent outings: controlled in line, vigorous in idea, and most persuasive when the garments led and the body followed.