The Met Gala 2026 embraced the theme “Fashion Is Art,” encouraging celebrities to blur the lines between couture, performance, history, and visual storytelling. Held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, this year’s gala rewarded imagination, historical references, and conceptual execution. While several celebrities delivered unforgettable fashion moments worthy of museum walls, others failed to fully embrace the artistic ambition of the night. Fashion Reverie delivers a full scoop on yays and nays just for our viewers.
Celebrities that Fit the Theme

Image courtesy of Xie Weixiao
Eileen Gu in Iris Van Herpen
Eileen Gu delivered one of the strongest interpretations of the evening in a sculptural Iris Van Herpen creation that looked like kinetic artwork in motion; however, it presented prebiological molecules. Fluid bubbles, and architectural silhouette transformed the Olympic athlete into a living installation piece. It was avant-garde couture at its finest and perfectly aligned with the “Fashion Is Art” concept.

Image courtesy of vogue.com
Sabrina Carpenter in Cristian Dior
Sabrina Carpenter embraced cinematic glamour in a dramatic Dior gown inspired by classic Hollywood film noir. Crystal embellishments resembling vintage film strips gave the look a storytelling element, while the sharply structured silhouette elevated it beyond traditional red-carpet dressing. The ensemble captured both fantasy and fashion history.

Image courtesy of Theo Vargo/Getty Images
Madonna in YSL by Anthony Vaccarello
Madonna once again proved her mastery of fashion symbolism. Her Saint Laurent ensemble was anchored by a dramatic ship-inspired hat referencing one of the most extravagant trends of 18th-century French aristocracy. During the reign of Marie Antoinette, women famously wore elaborate “naval hats” featuring miniature ships balanced atop towering, powdered hairstyles, a style immortalized in Rococo portraiture and historical paintings. However, the whole look is a reinterpretation of Leonora Carrington’s 1945 oil painting “The Temptation of St. Anthony.”
Madonna transformed this historical reference into wearable performance art, blending fashion history with theatrical modernity. The look felt intellectual, rebellious, and unmistakably Met Gala with a dash of Goth. The hat belonged to fashion editor Isabella Blow and was commissioned by her from none other than milliner master Philip Treacy.

Image courtesy of Shutterstock
Sabine Getty in Ashi Studio
Sabine Getty delivered one of the evening’s most refined couture moments in Ashi Studio. The structured ivory gown featured exaggerated sculptural draping, hand-embroidered embellishments, and a sweeping silhouette that resembled classical marble sculpture. The look balanced modern couture craftsmanship with old-world elegance, making it feel like a living gallery piece.

Image courtesy of Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images
Lauren Sánchez Bezos in Schiaparelli
Lauren Sánchez Bezos embraced portrait-inspired glamour in Schiaparelli with a silhouette directly referencing Madame X, one of the most controversial and iconic paintings in fashion history. The portrait, painted by John Singer Sargent, presented Parisian socialite Virginie Amélie Avegno Gautreau and scandalized 19th-century Paris because of its sensual pose and originally fallen dress strap, which audiences at the time considered shockingly provocative. (He eventually had to revise the portrait and put the strap back on.)
Lauren’s Schiaparelli look echoed the painting’s dramatic neckline, sculpted silhouette, and commanding elegance while modernizing its themes of femininity and power. By referencing Madame X, Sánchez transformed herself into a living portrait, perfectly aligned with the “Fashion Is Art” theme.
Celebrities that Did Not Reflect the Theme

image courtesy of Julian Hamilton/Getty Images
Beyoncé in Olivier Rousteing
Beyoncé’s crystal-encrusted skeletal look by Olivier Rousteing was visually striking, but it leaned more toward fantasy glamour than artistic interpretation. The look lacked conceptual depth and museum-like storytelling that defined the strongest looks of the evening. She looked Cabaret ready and the dress needed better tailoring. Additionally, Beyoncé’s disappeared in all the bling and the oversized feather coat.

Image courtesy of Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images
Heidi Klum as The Veiled Vestal
Heidi Klum’s marble statue-inspired transformation referenced classical sculpture, but the execution felt overly literal. The look resembled theatrical costume design more than fashion innovation, missing the balance between artistry and couture sophistication.

Image courtesy of Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images
Nicole Kidman in Chanel
Nicole Kidman opted for Chanel, but the understated sequined gown failed to embrace the dramatic imagination expected from the Met Gala. As a co-chair, folks anticipated a more daring artistic statement than just embracing color red used in painting.

Image courtesy of Lainey Gossip
Cardi B in Marc Jacobs
Cardi B embraced exaggerated proportions and sculptural glamour in Marc Jacobs, but the look lacked narrative clarity. While bold and theatrical, it appeared more chaotic than artistic. A blow-up doll look does not belong on the Met Gala carpet.

Image courtesy of reddit.com
Keke Palmer in Prabal Gurung
Keke Palmer’s Prabal Gurung gown featured impeccable tailoring and metallic glamour, but the overall presentation felt too safe for a theme centered around wearable art. The look leaned toward classic red-carpet gown rather than transformative fashion storytelling.

Image courtesy of Getty Images
Connor Storrie in YSL by Anthony Vaccarello
Connor Storrie’s ensemble looked very elegant until he took off the jacket. This garment attempted to modernize menswear through a plunging halter-style top paired with sleek tailoring. However, the styling felt disconnected from the artistic direction of the gala and lacked in execution. Rather than appearing daring or conceptual, the halter detail came across awkwardly unfinished, making it one of the evening’s weaker menswear moments.

Image courtesy of Kevin Mazur/Getty Images
Teyana Taylor in Tom Ford by Haider Ackermann
Teyana Taylor wore Tom Ford by Haider Ackermann with dramatic fringe metallic textures. She looked Christmas-tree ready and it lacked the historical or artistic references that elevated many of the evening’s standout ensembles. Can we say the late Rip Taylor in drag!!
Political Looks That Fit the Theme

Image courtesy of reddit.com
Sarah Paulson in Matières Fécales
Sarah Paulson delivered one of the evening’s most provocative statements in Matières Fécales, wearing a stark avant-garde tulle gown finished with a one-dollar bill stretched across her eyes. Dubbed “The One Percent,” the ensemble was interpreted as a critique of the world’s wealthiest elite. The look transformed fashion into protest art while perfectly aligning with the gala’s emphasis on visual storytelling.

Image courtesy of Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Bad Bunny in custom ZARA
Bad Bunny delivered one of the evening’s most unexpected interpretations in custom ZARA. The singer dramatically aged himself for the red carpet with gray hair, aged makeup effects, and styling intended to portray an older version of himself. The look transformed Bad Bunny into a living character study rather than simply a celebrity in couture, which perfectly aligned with the Met Gala 2026 theme; except, he is bringing attention and criticizing ageism.

Image courtesy of Kevin Mazur/Getty Images
Anne Hathaway in Michael Kors Collection with Peter McGough
Anne Hathaway embraced poetic symbolism in a Michael Kors Collection collaboration with artist Peter McGough. Inspired by the ‘Grecian urns at the museum,’ the gown featured Grecian draping, hand-painted motifs, and classical imagery. Interpreted as a visual narrative of a subtle plea for peace, the back of the dress features the goddess of peace. Rather than relying on spectacle, Hathaway delivered a deep, intellectual interpretation of the theme that blended literature, art, and fashion.
The Met Gala 2026 proved once again that fashion is most compelling when it communicates something larger than beauty alone. The stars who succeeded this year understood that the Met Gala is not simply about dressing up, it is about creating art, sparking conversation, and leaving behind an image that feels worthy of exhibition.
Tijana Ibrahimovic

Speak Your Mind