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56 Runway Looks That Fit the 2026 Met Gala Dress Code, “Fashion Is Art”

Collage by Vogue

Dior fall 2005 couture Photo: Marcio Madeira

The 2026 Met Gala officially has a dress code: “Fashion Is Art.”

The exhibition’s theme is “Costume Art,” which curator Andrew Bolton explains is dedicated to “the centrality of the dressed body in the museum’s vast collection.” While the Costume Institute’s show is dedicated to the corporeal form, the dress code offers guests room for broad interpretation. Luckily, there is plenty of inspiration to draw from. Designers have long translated art (in its many nebulous forms) into wearable works.

Many attendees, we imagine, will draw from art movements. As the likes of Vivienne Westwood, John Galliano, and Christian Lacroix knew well, one can’t go wrong with turning back the pages of history. The Rococo, Baroque, and Renaissance periods are sure to be popular jumping-off points. But there are also more modern interpretations: Yves Saint Laurent channeled Piet Mondrian in 1965 (and again in 2002 at his final haute couture show), while Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez nodded to Ellsworth Kelly in their Loewe debut last year. And, of course, we can’t forget Moschino, Prada, and Versace’s love of Pop Art.

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Famous painting subjects are also on our bingo card. Portrait of Madame X and Flaming June would make lovely picks, though we’d also be thrilled to see someone delve into Cubism. Portrait of Dora Maar, anyone?

We can also expect plenty of nods to the “Costume Art” theme—literal and cerebral. Perhaps the pinnacle of costume art is Yves Saint Laurent’s 1979 ode to Pablo Picasso’s costumes for Sergei Diaghilev’s ballet, Parade. Riffs on the human form are also likely, be it trompe l’oeil figures, naked dressing, and breastplates, or exaggerated padding.

There are also plenty of fashion-as-art moments that can serve as a reference. What better place than the Met steps for an outrageous piece of performance art? We wouldn’t be surprised to see an IRL transformation on the first Monday in May. Consider Shalom Harlow closing Alexander McQueen’s spring 1999 collection, her strapless white dress graffitied in real time with neon yellow and black paint, or Bella Hadid’s spray-on look at Coperni’s spring 2023 runway.

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Below, we’ve rounded up 56 past runway looks that could suit the 2026 Met Gala dress code, “Fashion Is Art.”


If You’re a Rococo Romantic

Vivienne Westwood fall 1995 Photo: Condé Nast Archive
Dior fall 2005 couture Photo: Marcio Madeira
Balenciaga spring 2006 Photo: Marcio Madeira

If You’re Going for Baroque

Christian Lacroix spring 2008 couture Toni Anne Barson Archive


If You’re in Favor of a Renaissance Renaissance

Alexander McQueen fall 2013 Gianni Pucci / InDigital | GoRunway
Dilara Findikoglu fall 2025 Photo: Isidore Montag / Gorunway.com
Valentino fall 2016 couture Photo: Yannis Vlamos / Indigital.tv

If You’re a Modernista

Yves Saint Laurent spring 2002 couture Photo: Antoine de Parseval/Shoot Digital for Style.com
Loewe spring 2026 Photo: Umberto Fratini / Gorunway.com

If You Keep it Surreal

Schiaparelli fall 2021 couture Photo: Daniel Roseberry / Courtesy of Schiaparelli
Alexander McQueen spring 1997 Photo: Condé Nast Archive
Loewe fall 2022 Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

If You Want to Make a Good First Impression(ist)

Jean Paul Gaultier spring 2003 couture Photo: Style.com
Dior fall 2012 couture Yannis Vlamos / GoRunway.com

If You’re Top of the Pops

Versace spring 1991 Photo: Condé Nast Archive
Moschino fall 2014 Yanni Vlamos / Indigitalimages.com
Prada spring 2014 Monica Feudi / Feudiguaineri.com

If You’re Taking the “Costume Art” Theme to Heart

Yves Saint Laurent fall 1979 couture Pierre VAUTHEY/Getty Images

If You’re Taking the “Body” Theme to Heart

Thom Browne spring 2026 Photo: Courtesy of Thom Browne
Maison Margiela spring 2024 couture Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com
Tom Ford spring 2020 Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com
Comme des Garçons fall 2010 Marcio Madeira / FirstView.com
Marc Jacobs spring 2025 Photo: Courtesy of Marc Jacobs
Thom Browne spring 2018 Photo: Luca Tombolini / Indigital.tv

If You’re Going Literal

Viktor & Rolf fall 2015 couture Alessandro Garofalo / Indigitalimages.com
Moschino spring 2020 Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com
Schiaparelli spring 2026 Photo: Courtesy of Schiaparelli

If You’re in Your Cubist Period

Yves Saint Laurent spring 1988 couture Pierre VAUTHEY/Getty Images
Alaïa fall 2022 Photo: Courtesy of Alaïa
Moschino spring 2020 Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com

If You’re in Your Blue Period 🙁

Olivier Theyskens fall 2000 Photo: JB Villareal / Shoot Digital
Colleen Allen fall 2025 Photo: Annie Powers / Courtesy of Colleen Allen
Christian Lacroix spring 1996 couture Photo: Condé Nast Archive

If You’re in Your Rose Period 🙂

Moschino spring 2020 Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com
Jean Paul Gaultier spring 2024 couture by Simone Rocha Photo: Isidore Montag / Gorunway.com
Valentino spring 2025 couture Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com

If You Loved the John Singer Sargent Exhibit

A very Madame X dress from Givenchy fall 1995 couture Photo: Condé Nast Archive

If You Want to Channel Flaming June

Saint Laurent spring 2025 Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com
Valentino spring 2021 Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com
Alberta Ferretti spring 2014 Yannis Vlamos / Indigitalimages.com

If One Kiss Is All it Takes

Dior spring 2008 couture Photo: Daniele Oberrauch
McQueen spring 2013 Monica Feudi / Feudiguaineri.com

If You’re a Dior Ambassador

Dior spring 2007 couture Fairchild Archive/Getty Images
Dior fall 2007 couture Stephane Cardinale – Corbis/Getty Images
Dior fall 2025 couture Photo: Paolo Lanzi / Gorunway.com

If Performance Art Is Art, Thank You Very Much

Alexander McQueen spring 1999 Photo: Condé Nast Archive
Alexander McQueen spring 1999 Photo: Condé Nast Archive
Coperni spring 2023 Pierre Suu/Getty Images
Coperni spring 2023 Photo: Courtesy of Coperni

If You’re a Blank Canvas

Christopher John Rogers pre-fall 2023 Photo: Courtesy of Christopher John Rogers
Molly Goddard spring 2024 Photo: Daniele Oberrauch / Gorunway.com
Comme des Garçons spring 1994 Photo: Condé Nast Archive
Zoe Gustavia Anna Whalen fall 2025 Photo: Christian Defonte / Courtesy of Zoe Gustavia Anna Whalen

If You’re a Blank Canvas…And You Want to Wear Yohji

Yohji Yamamoto spring 1999
Yohji Yamamoto spring 2005 Photo: Marcio Madeira
Yohji Yamamoto spring 2009 Marcio Madeira

This article was originally published on Vogue.com

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