The first Monday in May is upon us, and with it comes the Met Gala 2026, the night when fashion, art and secrecy collide outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art. This year’s exhibition theme, announced in November of last year as Costume Art, is being paired months later with a dress code of Fashion Is Art.
The museum said the show will examine the centrality of the dressed body and use garments and works of art from across its vast collection to create pairings that illuminate the indivisible connection between clothing and the body. It will also look at the complex interplay between artistic representations of the body and fashion as an embodied art form, with the exhibition on view from May 10 to January 10.
Invited guests are being told to express their own relationship to fashion as an embodied art form and to celebrate the countless depictions of the dressed body throughout art history. The guest list, as always, is famously kept secret until the night of the gala, leaving the public with only the theme, the dress code and a year’s worth of anticipation.
That gap is part of what gives the event its pull. The exhibit and the dress code are never identical, but the dress code is meant to complement what is on view inside the museum, turning the red carpet into a live extension of the show rather than a simple preview. By the time the doors open, the question is not who is invited in principle. It is who appears, and how closely the night matches the museum’s idea of Costume Art.
This year’s answer will arrive in public one look at a time, but the framework is already set: a gala built around the dressed body, a show that opens May 10, and a guest list that stays hidden until the night itself.