The “Fashion Is Art” theme for this year’s star-studded Metropolitan Museum fundraiser is drawing sharp criticism online — but the curator behind it says there’s more depth than meets the eye.
The Met Gala has never been short on spectacle, but this year’s dress code announcement arrived with more of a collective shrug than a gasp. Revealed on Feb. 23, the theme “Fashion Is Art” — tied to the Costume Institute’s upcoming exhibition, Costume Art — quickly ignited a wave of skepticism across social media, with fans calling it everything from “vague” to “lazy” to barely a directive at all.
The annual fundraiser at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, set for the first Monday in May, is co-chaired this year by Beyoncé, Nicole Kidman, Venus Williams and Vogue’s longtime editor Anna Wintour — a formidable quartet that, for many fans, made the underwhelming theme feel even more surprising.
A Theme That Felt Too Familiar
Online reaction was swift and largely unenthusiastic. Across X, formerly Twitter, fashion followers questioned what the dress code was actually asking of its celebrity guests. The prevailing sentiment: if fashion is always art, is this really a directive at all? Critics described the theme as the broadest possible creative brief — one that, in effect, gives attendees permission to wear anything and label it intentional. Some pointed out that the theme felt indistinguishable from what already happens at the event every year, with or without explicit guidance.
Others expressed concern about the visual territory such an open-ended theme might invite — worrying about an onslaught of literal interpretations, including predictable nods to famous paintings that could veer into costume-party territory rather than high fashion.
The Curator’s Vision Behind the Met Gala Theme
Not everyone sees the theme as a creative cop-out. Andrew Bolton, the British curator behind the Costume Institute’s exhibition, offered a more layered explanation when speaking with the press. His concept centers on the body as a blank canvas — a framework through which designers have long approached their craft, whether or not it’s been articulated in those terms.
Bolton described the exhibition’s focus as “the dressed body,” an idea he argues is the connective tissue running through every wing and gallery of the Metropolitan Museum, not just the Costume Institute. Archival garments will be displayed alongside paintings and sculptures, positioning fashion not as a subcategory of art but as its foundation.
For Bolton, the project represents a long-overdue reframing — an argument that fashion has always occupied the center of artistic expression, even when the industry treated it as peripheral.
A Star-Studded Committee
Beyond the co-chairs, the gala’s host committee reads like a cultural cross-section of the moment. Fashion designer Anthony Vaccarello and actress Zoë Kravitz will lead the committee, joined by musicians Sabrina Carpenter, Doja Cat, LISA, Sam Smith and Yseult. The acting contingent includes Teyana Taylor, Elizabeth Debicki, Gwendoline Christie and Lena Dunham, while dancer Misty Copeland and basketball star A’ja Wilson round out the sports and performance world. Models Alex Consani, Paloma Elsesser and Lauren Wasser, alongside Vogue editor Chloe Malle and artist Anna Weyant, complete the lineup.
What Comes Next
Whether the “Fashion Is Art” theme ultimately produces a memorable red carpet or a forgettable one remains to be seen. The Met Gala has survived divisive themes before, and its most iconic moments have often emerged from the tension between expectation and surprise. With a co-chair lineup that includes some of the most visually daring figures in entertainment, there’s reason to believe the carpet could still deliver — even if the brief left something to be desired.
Source: The Mirror US

