
Every year, as the first Monday in May draws near, the world collectively leans in. Fashion critics sharpen their pencils, celebrity watchers brew their tea, and the internet prepares its memes because the Met Gala is coming.
The Met Gala has brought us so many iconic fashion moments. I think back to Rihanna gliding up the stairs at Met Gala 2015, in that unforgettable canary-yellow Guo Pei creation, or Cardi B shutting down Met Gala 2019 in vintage Mugler and enough pearls to make Poseidon jealous. The Met Gala doesn’t just give us outfits; it gives us moments.
What Is the Met Gala?
Officially known as the Costume Institute Benefit, the Met Gala is the annual fundraising event for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute in New York. In pop-culture terms, it’s the Super Bowl of fashion, a place where art, costume, celebrity, and storytelling collide. It’s the one red carpet where you’re expected to dress up, not tone down. Where designers and muses come together to interpret a theme that sparks creativity, conversation, and occasionally, chaos.
Introducing “Costume Art”: A New Exhibition, A New Era
The spring 2026 exhibition, simply titled “Costume Art”, will celebrate the opening of the Condé Nast Galleries, a brand-new 12,000-square-foot space right beside The Met’s iconic Great Hall. It’s a huge milestone for the Costume Institute, and curator Andrew Bolton is treating it as such.
According to Bolton, this exhibition marks a major turning point for how fashion is seen and respected within the museum world. For years, fashion has lived at the edges of fine art, admired but often not treated with the same seriousness.
Now, The Met is putting fashion right at the heart of its galleries, acknowledging something Bolton has been saying for ages: that clothing isn’t secondary to culture; it is culture.
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Fashion and Art, Side by Side
To mark the occasion, Bolton is pairing garments from across fashion history with paintings, sculptures, and objects from The Met’s full 5,000-year collection. The exhibition will explore the dressed body as the museum’s true common thread and the one constant that links ancient artefacts to modern couture.
He argues that even when art depicts a nude figure, that body is never just bare. It always carries cultural meaning, and the same is true of fashion. Clothes tell stories about identity, power, beauty, age, status, gender, and the body itself.
Breaking Down the Theme: The Body Takes Centre Stage
“Costume Art” will take a more body-focused approach than previous Costume Institute shows, which often highlighted garments but not the human forms imagined inside them.
Bolton wants to restore that relationship and the inseparable connection between clothing and the bodies that inspire it, hold it, and reshape it. He’s organising the exhibition around several forms of the body, grouped loosely into three categories:
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Bodies we see everywhere in art, such as classical and nude bodies.
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Bodies that rarely receive attention: ageing bodies, pregnant bodies, and non-idealised forms.
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Universal bodies like anatomical representations.
It’s a more inclusive and realistic view than the fashion industry typically embraces. Bolton wants this exhibition to broaden the conversation and show that garments aren’t art despite being attached to bodies; they’re art because of that relationship.
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Why the Name Matters
Interestingly, this is the first Bolton exhibition with no subtitle… just “Costume Art”. According to him, dropping the subtitle felt like loosening a corset: liberating and exactly right for the moment. The name states plainly what the entire exhibition aims to prove: that fashion deserves to sit on the same level as fine art.
Mark Your Calendar
“Costume Art” is supported by Jeff and Lauren Sánchez Bezos, with additional backing from Saint Laurent and Condé Nast. It opens to the public on 10 May 2026 and runs until 10 January 2027.
Before the exhibition’s doors open, all eyes will be on the Met Gala red carpet on 4 May 2026, where celebrities and designers will interpret this theme in ways we can only imagine.