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The Met’s 2026 much-anticipated spring exhibit treats fashion like fine art

A major new Met exhibition pairs couture with centuries of art to explore the dressed body.

Laura Ratliff
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Laura Ratliff
costume institute
Photograph: Courtesy of the Metrpolitan Museum of Art
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If you’ve ever looked at a couture gown and thought, “that belongs in a museum,” the Metropolitan Museum of Art is officially ahead of you.

The museum’s spring 2026 Costume Institute exhibition, Costume Art, will open next week, on May 10, and it’s shaping up to be one of its most ambitious fashion shows yet: less about pretty dresses, more about what clothing actually does to the human body (and how art has considered that over thousands of years).

Running through January 10, 2027, the exhibition will take over the Met’s brand-new, nearly 12,000-square-foot Condé Nast Galleries, a major expansion specifically designed to give fashion a bigger, more permanent stage inside the museum.

costume institute
Photograph: Courtesy of the Metrpolitan Museum of Art

The overarching premise of the exhibit is that fashion isn’t just adjacent to art—it is art. The show will feature nearly 400 objects pulled from across the Met’s sprawling collection, pairing garments with paintings, sculptures and decorative works to highlight how intertwined they are. A contemporary designer suit is shown alongside an ancient marble statue, while a 19th-century dress engages with a pointillist painting.

Instead of organizing the show by designer or time period, Costume Art will group pieces by “body types”—categories like the “Classical Body,” “Pregnant Body,” “Aging Body” and “Mortal Body.”

There are also some clever staging choices baked in. Mannequins will feature reflective, polished-steel heads so visitors can literally see themselves in the display—an on-the-nose but effective way to reinforce the idea that fashion only really exists once it’s worn. It sounds a little philosophical for a fashion exhibit, but that’s largely the point. “‘Costume Art’ privileges its materiality and the indivisible connection between our bodies and the clothes we wear,” said the Institute’s curator, Andrew Bolton.

costume institute
Photograph: Courtesy of the Metrpolitan Museum of Art

The show also marks a bigger institutional shift. “This immensely creative and collaborative show will demonstrate the Museum’s innovative and forward-thinking approach to presenting Costume Institute exhibitions,” said Max Hollein, adding that it highlights the Met’s ability to position fashion within more than 5,000 years of art history.

Of course, all of this intellectual heavy lifting kicks off with the biggest fashion event of the year: the Met Gala. The 2026 gala, taking place tonight, will be co-chaired by Beyoncé, Nicole Kidman, Venus Williams and Anna Wintour—a lineup that alone guarantees a red carpet worth dissecting for weeks.

The dress code this year? “Fashion is Art.”

costume institute
Photograph: Courtesy of the Metrpolitan Museum of Art

In other words, expect fewer literal interpretations (goodbye, predictable theme costumes) and more conceptual looks—guests expressing their personal relationship to fashion as an art form. Or, at least, that’s the idea.

So yes, there will be spectacular gowns. But the bigger idea is harder to Instagram: that what we wear isn’t just decoration—it’s one of the oldest, most persistent ways humans have made meaning out of the body itself.

And now, finally, the Met is giving it the gallery space to prove it.

costume institute
Photograph: Courtesy of the Metrpolitan Museum of Art

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