Met opens 'Costume Art' exhibition in new Condé Nast Galleries

The Metropolitan Museum of Art has launched 'Costume Art,' its inaugural exhibition in the new permanent Condé Nast Galleries. Curator Andrew Bolton structured the show around diverse body typologies to connect fashion and art through the human form. Interactive mannequins by sculptor Samar Hejazi reflect visitors' own images, fostering personal empathy.

The exhibition, titled “Costume Art,” debuted in the Condé Nast Galleries just off the Met's Great Hall. This marks the Costume Institute's first show in the new space, allowing for extended display periods. Bolton explained that the display is organized around body typologies seen across the museum's artworks, emphasizing the dressed body as a unifying thread. “The simple thesis for the show really is the fact that the dressed body is the connecting thread throughout the entire museum,” Bolton said. Diverse mannequins modeled after named individuals challenge traditional beauty standards, as noted by scholar Llewellyn Negrin in the catalog, where she highlighted how mannequins often perpetuate idealized proportions. The show explores polarities like the art-fashion divide through sections such as “Diversity in Bodily Being,” featuring pregnant, corpulent, and disabled bodies, and “Bodily Being in Its Universality,” addressing anatomy, aging, and mortality. Highlights include Vivienne Westwood leggings paired with Albrecht Dürer’s 1504 engraving of Adam and Eve, Rudi Gernreich’s 1964 monokini, and garments by designers like Rei Kawakubo and Duran Lantink that celebrate non-normative forms. Bolton paired a Van Gogh painting with pieces by Yves Saint Laurent and Jonathan Anderson for Loewe, linking them through shared mental health themes. In the “Abstract Body” section, historical foundation garments like corsets illustrate how fashion molded women's forms, paired with George Seurat’s 1884 study. The exhibit inverts traditional views by examining artworks through fashion's lens. “We’re not creating a new hierarchy, we’re just trying to create more of an equitability between artworks and bodies,” Bolton observed. It addresses fashion's historical marginalization due to its ties to the body and femininity, while countering AI-driven flatness with tactile experiences like braille on Angela Wanjiku’s dress. Bolton rejected labeling the show as “woke,” stating, “It isn’t intended to be a woke show, but yes, it’s certainly intended to address how different types of bodies are under attack.” The exhibition promotes connection among creative expressions and human experiences, inviting visitors to project their own stories onto the displays.

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2026 Met Gala red carpet scene with Kardashian-Jenners and Hailey Bieber in molded busts, bold colors, and sculptural artistic gowns.
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2026 Met Gala: Molded busts and bold colors dominate red carpet

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Building on the glamour of the 2026 Met Gala's 'Fashion Is Art' dress code—which celebrated the Costume Institute’s 'Costume Art' exhibition—the red carpet showcased sculpted bodices, vibrant hues, trompe l'oeil effects, prosthetic details, and naked dressing interpretations. The Kardashian-Jenners and Hailey Bieber led the trends with painterly body depictions and sculptural silhouettes.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art has released a catalog for its upcoming 'Costume Art' exhibition, reframing fashion alongside paintings and sculptures. Curator Andrew Bolton commissioned paper assemblages from artist Julie Wolfe to highlight connections between art and clothing. The catalog features side-by-side images of artworks and dressed mannequins.

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The Metropolitan Museum of Art has unveiled the Condé M. Nast Galleries for its Costume Institute, transforming a former gift shop into a prime exhibition space. The new almost-12,000-square-foot area, adjacent to the Great Hall, hosts the 'Costume Art' exhibition, pairing fashion with artworks from across the museum's collections. Curator Andrew Bolton described fashion as 'beyond art' for embodying lived experience.

Vogue kicked off Met Gala weekend with its annual First Friday party at Madame Tussauds in Times Square. Hosted by Chloe Malle, Teyana Taylor, and Simone Ashley, the event drew designers, models, and celebrities amid wax figures of stars like Beyoncé and Rihanna. Guests embraced the 'Bodies, Bodies, Bodies' dress code tied to the Costume Institute's upcoming exhibit.

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Designer Zoe Gustavia Anna Whalen has created a new exhibition at Null Object gallery that reimagines garments from her fall 2026 collection as sculptural objects. The show explores themes of life, death and rebirth through an immersive setup centered on a tub and a disassembled mannequin.

The Curator’s Choice exhibition at Art on Target presents works by 10 artists selected from the local community. It reflects the range of voices and skills in Nelson Mandela Bay’s visual arts scene. Now in its third year, the show includes both emerging and established creators.

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At the 2026 Met Gala on May 4, stars like Loli Bahia, Madonna, and Kate Moss turned heads in striking Saint Laurent designs by creative director Anthony Vaccarello, perfectly aligning with the event's 'Fashion Is Art' dress code.

 

 

 

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