Over the years and a myriad of themes, the Met Gala steps have been witness to how fashion has been reinterpreted as art. With this year's theme, the onus is to push the concept even further.  Photos from Getty images
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With 'Fashion Art' as the dress code for the 2026 Met Gala, it could get interesting

In line with the Met Costume Institute exhibition's theme for 2026, "Costume Art," the focus is placed on the dressed body as a form of expression.

Elizabeth S. Timbol

Last year, it was announced that Costume Art will be the central theme for the spring exhibition of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute, which hopes to explore how fashion (and clothing) is a form of and expression of art. Where there exists a space where both are given an equal measure of admiration and awe. As the first Monday of May approaches, all roads lead to the 2026 Met Gala, and its recently announced theme and dress code Fashion As Art. Call it an ode to the exhibition's theme, with the intention to showcase how the dressed body can be transformed into a living work of art.

The main exhibit, Costume Art, will feature a 200-piece collection that looks to explore the the centrality of the dressed body, told across canvases juxtaposed against costumes curated from The Met, and The Costume Institutes vast collections. For It will be showcased in the newly dedicated 12,000-square-foot suite of galleries, adjacent to the Great Hall of the Metropolitan Museum in New York City, beginning May 10, 2026.

For Costume Institute curator Andrew Bolton, in an interview with Vogue Magazine, fashion is the crux of both the exhibit and this year's gala. “What connects every curatorial department and what connects every single gallery in the museum is fashion, or the dressed body,” he explains. “It’s the common thread throughout the whole museum."

Longtime Met Gala chair Anna Wintour's long black coat with floral appliqués by the previously Jonathan Anderson-helmed Loewe was considered to be one of the best looks from the 2023 Met Gala. A stunning example of fashion as an expression of art.

In an earlier interview on the 2026 exhibition, Bolton explains that the intent is to "put the body back into discussions about art and fashion, and to embrace the body, not to take it away as a way of elevating fashion to an art form.” Which lends itself well to to possible interpretations of the gala's recently announced dress code - which can run the gamut of conceptual and creative, renaissance and regal, or an encounter with a mad hatter. With the current batch of creative directors across fashion's luxury houses have picked up fabric, pattern, texture, and thread, reimagining and reinventing fashion as a sartorial art form. With a tightly-guarded guest list, your guess is as good as any as to who gets to wear which designer as they walk up those fabled Met Gala steps for the world to see.

'Fashion Is Art' is practically synonymous with the style of these three ladies who are serving as co-chairs for the 2026 Met Gala - Nicole Kidman, Beyoncé, and Venus Williams

As expected, the hosting committee assembled by longtime Met Gala editorial director and co-chair Anna Wintour is no less than chic and stellar. Joining her as co-chairs for this yea are Hollywood A-listers Beyoncé, Nicole Kidman, and tennis champion Venus Williams. Belgian designer Anthony Vaccarello and American actress Zoë Kravitz will co-chair the Gala Host committee, where they will be joined by the likes of Sabrina Carpenter, Doja Cat, Gwendoline Christie, Alex Consani, Misty Copeland, Elizabeth Debicki, Lena Dunham, LISA, Sam Smith, Teyana Taylor, Lauren Wasser, Angela Bassett, Sinéad Burke, Rebecca Hall, Aimee Mullins, and Vogue's current editor Chloe Malle. Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos will also serve as honorary chairs, as the gala's lead sponsors.

On the first Monday of May, will it be 'art disguised as fashion' or 'fashion disguised as art' making its way up the steps of New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. With a theme and dress code like Fashion Is Art, it could go in any direction; good and bad. But that's what makes this theme so interesting - it's limits are only defined by how far you're willing to go. Fashion-wise that is. Quite apt for a year where Costume Art is front, center, and celebrated.