The 2026 Met Gala turned its red carpet into a walking museum, with the dress code “Fashion Is Art” setting up a night built on direct art-historical references. Madonna arrived in Saint Laurent inspired by Leonora Carrington’s “The Temptation Of St. Anthony. Fragment II,” while Kendall Jenner wore Gap by Zac Posen, drawing on the Winged Victory of Samothrace statue.
Yu Chi Lyra Kuo also leaned on the Winged Victory of Samothrace in Jean Paul Gaultier, and Hunter Schafer followed with a custom Prada look inspired by Gustav Klimt’s “Mäda Primavesi.” Lauren Sánchez Bezos wore Schiaparelli after “Madame X” by John Singer Sargent, while Gracie Abrams turned to Chanel and Klimt’s “Portrait of Adele Block-Bauer I.”
The parade of references kept going. Rachel Zegler’s dress was inspired by Paul Delaroche’s “The Execution of Lady Jane Grey,” Heidi Klum wore custom Mike Marino based on Giovanni Strazza’s “The Veiled Virgin,” Sam Smith appeared in Christian Cowan inspired by Evelyn Brent, and Ben Platt wore custom Tanner Fletcher drawn from Georges Seurat’s “A Sunday on La Grande Jatte.” The result was less a single trend than a roster of works translated into fabric, silhouette and embellishment.
That made the Met Gala less about the old red-carpet game of who wore the most dramatic look and more about how closely a designer could echo a source image without losing the wearer. The event’s art-first brief gave each outfit a clear reference point, and that made the comparisons immediate for anyone following along, including readers who had watched other viral fashion moments such as Dakota Johnson’s Valentino look at TIME100. The pressure was not only to look striking but to make the citation legible.
The tension in that approach is simple: when fashion openly borrows from art, the line between homage and costume gets thin. But on this night, that was the point. The 2026 Met Gala answered its own question with a red carpet that treated art history as a style guide, and Valentino sat inside that broader conversation as part of the larger industry race to turn a name, an image and a legacy into something people could see at a glance.