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29 May 2026

Met Gala 2026: The best dressed and controversies

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Ava Miltenberg in New Jersey, US

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Emma Chamberlain in Mugler, designed by Miguel Castro Freitas, 2026 Met Gala.

Picture by: Matt Crossick | Alamy

As a girl with absolutely no interest in sports, the Met Gala is my Super Bowl.

The 2026 Met Gala did more than flood social media feeds with extravagant gowns and celebrity headlines. It raised a record-breaking $42m for New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute, surpassing last year’s $31m, also a record.

Beneath the spectacle of diamonds, corsets and carefully curated red carpet moments lies something more complicated: a cultural event that exists at the intersection of art, wealth, celebrity and performance.

This year’s theme, “Costume Art”, asked attendees to treat clothing as a form of artistic expression rather than simple luxury. Inspired by the Costume Institute’s exhibition of the same name, the theme explored the relationship between fashion, identity and the body through history, pushing celebrities to think beyond simply looking glamorous.

Unlike some past Met Gala themes that felt vague or impossible to interpret, this year’s concept actually encouraged creativity. The best looks felt dramatic, sculptural and intentional. Some celebrities fully committed to the assignment, while others clearly played it safe.

Best dressed list

Some of my favourite ensembles of the night came from Emma Chamberlain, Kendall Jenner, Gracie Abrams, Lily-Rose Depp, Lila Moss and Laura Harrier, whose looks felt effortlessly elegant while still fitting the artistic direction of the night.

Kendall Jenner’s structured silhouette, dressed by designer Zac Posen for Gap Inc., was inspired by the Greek sculpture the Winged Victory of Samothrace (in the Louvre, Paris). It reflected the idea that fashion can become art through precision, the body’s shape and craftsmanship rather than pure extravagance or painted colours.

 

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In contrast, Emma Chamberlain took an entirely different path, but still perfectly captured the theme. Her Mugler dress, hand-painted by artist Anna Deller-Yee, directly interpreted the “fashion is art” theme by turning her into a literal painting. Chamberlain’s look balanced vintage glamour with sculptural tailoring in a way that felt both modern and museum-worthy.

My personal favourite was Gracie Abrams, dressed by Matthieu Blazy for Chanel. She wore a custom golden gown that functioned as a tribute to the work of Gustav Klimt. The primary inspiration for this gown was Klimt’s 1907 masterpiece, the Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer – also known as “The Woman in Gold”. Gracie proved that softer, romantic fashion could still feel artistic and intentional rather than overly theatrical.

The intersection between fashion and the body is what made this year’s theme stronger than many previous ones: it encouraged experimentation while still leaving room for individuality.

Criticism and contradictions

The night also exposed the contradictions of the event itself. Much of the criticism centred around the growing sense of elitism surrounding the Met Gala, especially during a time of economic and foreign anxieties and ongoing inequalities.

Social media quickly filled with comparisons to The Hunger Games, criticising the event as an extravagant display of wealth disconnected from the reality most Americans face.

That criticism intensified with the highly visible presence of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos, as lead sponsors of this year’s Gala and the exhibition, and honorary co-chairs. For many viewers, placing one of the richest couples in the world at the centre of an event supposedly celebrating artistic expression reinforced the idea that over time, the Met Gala has become less about art and more about exclusivity, status and billionaire influence.

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  • Protest against Jeff Bezos’s involvement in the 2026 Met Gala.

    Picture by: ZUMA Press, Inc. | Alamy

  • There were calls for a boycott in the days before the Gala. On the night, protesters gathered outside the event, and critics questioned whether an evening focused on custom couture, multimillion-dollar jewellery and invitation-only luxury could ever truly present itself as culturally meaningful rather than commercially performative.

    Part of what keeps people so invested in the Met Gala is the emotional attachment audiences form with the celebrities themselves. People were devastated that Zendaya – arguably one of the few celebrities who constantly understands the assignment every single year – was absent from the carpet. Her Met Gala appearances have become events of their own; she approaches fashion like storytelling rather than branding.

    Meanwhile, the return of Beyoncé(after a decade) and Blake Lively (after three years) reminded people why certain celebrities dominate conversations around the event. Their appearances create anticipation in some audiences (but not me).They represent the version of the Met Gala some actually want to see: dramatic, theatrical, fashion-focused and culturally memorable, rather than overly corporate.

    The Met Gala remains fascinating precisely because of this contradiction. It genuinely celebrates creativity and craftsmanship, yet it also transforms fashion into a spectacle consumed by millions who could never access the world being displayed.

    Which ultimately raises the question: when fashion becomes this exclusive, is the Met Gala still celebrating art, or simply turning it into entertainment for the ultra-wealthy?

    Written by:

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    Ava Miltenberg

    Contributor

    New Jersey, United States

    I still have a highlighter-streaked notebook from a rainy afternoon at my middle school, the pages warped from my backpack getting soaked, the ink a little smeared, everything glowing yellow anyway. I remember sitting in a crowded classroom, bell blaring, while my social studies teacher explained what your First Amendment rights actually meant. I didn’t say much, but I wrote everything down.

    Long before that, I used to sit on the stairs at home and eavesdrop on my dad’s late-night phone calls from his office. I didn’t understand the legal jargon, but I picked up the cadence, the careful questions, the long pauses, and the way words could shift any situation. It was my quiet introduction to how law works in real life.

    Last summer, I took criminal justice classes at USC, trading my high school classroom for a packed lecture hall where professors challenge easy narratives about punishment, power, and fairness. The experience made me more skeptical, more curious, and less willing to accept simple explanations.

    When I’m not thinking about law or history, I’m usually reading or writing poetry, or scribbling lines in the margins of whatever it is that I’m studying. I like precision, in a poem, in a news story, or in a legal argument from Suits.

    I write to slow complicated moments down, look at them closely, and understand what they reveal about people and power.

    Edited by:

    author_bio

    Lola Kadas

    Editor-in-Chief 2026

    Budapest, Hungary

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