Jalil Johnson is a Who What Wear editor in residence and New York–based writer, fashion authority, and media personality who began his career as a stylist and later spent three years at Saks Fifth Avenue refining his eye for trend reporting, emerging talent, and brand storytelling. He now brings his expertise to his newsletter, Consider Yourself Cultured, and has also been featured in The New York Times, Harper’s Bazaar, The Wall Street Journal, and The Financial Times, and Vogue named him one of the “New Faces of Street Style.”

There has long been a debate over whether or not fashion can be considered art. In fact, while playing a rousing game of trivia at the Instagram Met Gala watch party hosted at the Mark Hotel, I was reminded of something Karl Lagerfeld said in the documentary The First Monday in May: “What we do is applied art. Chanel never said she was an artist. She was a dressmaker. Madam Vionnet was a dressmaker. Madam Lanvin was a dressmaker. They wanted to dress a certain kind of society, and they were happy and flattered when those women bought those dresses.”

Inside the Exhibition

Costume Art exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

This year, however, the Met’s Costume Institute’s spring exhibition, Costume Art, attempts to push that conversation forward, reframing the question of whether fashion can be considered an art form or, in the words of Lagerfeld, an “applied art.”

Costume Art exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

At the press preview, Andrew Bolton, the Wendy Yu curator in charge of the Costume Institute, stated, “It implores us to see the dressed body as not only an object of representation but as a subject of experience, a medium in which the medium of art can be reimagined.” Costume Art, the inaugural exhibition in the Condé M. Nast Galleries, encourages visitors to move beyond seeing fashion as a vehicle for art and instead understand fashion and art as working in tandem.

Andrew Bolton speaking at the Met Gala 2026 press conference.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

It reinforces not only what Met Gala honorary chair Lauren Sánchez Bezos declared at the preview (“The Met has always understood something the world is finally catching up to—fashion is art”) but also asks viewers to consider fashion as the medium we engage with daily to perform the ultimate act of art, be it applied or performance: living. As Bolton went on to say, “Fashion isn’t only something we see. It’s something we wear. It shapes posture, gesture, presence, and perception. In wearing clothes, we don’t simply express who we are. We become who we are, which makes fashion different from any other art form. It collapses the boundary between subject and object.”

Costume Art exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

The exhibition itself comprises nearly 400 items from the Met’s collection, and fashion is placed in dialogue with artwork spanning centuries, creating connections that range from the literal to the conceptual. These works are organized into a series of thematic categories, all tied to the body. Among them is Classical Body, which is rooted in Hellenic and Roman studies of form, featuring a molded, armor-like gold minidress from Givenchy designed by Alexander McQueen alongside more fluid, draped pieces that echo the softness of classical sculpture, like a Di Petsa dress that appears as though the wearer arrived straight from a wet T-shirt contest.

Costume Art exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Pregnant Body examines maternalwear through the ages, including a Charles James taffeta dinner suit designed as part of a maternity line for Lane Bryant Inc. in 1954, serving as both a counterpoint to the classical ideal and a reclamation of it. Epidermal Body and Inscribed Body explore fashion that mimics or evokes skin, reinforcing the idea of clothing as a second skin, from a Schiaparelli dress by Daniel Roseberry with the appearance of peeling flesh to Adriana Varejão’s “Parede com Incisões à la Fontana—Horizontal” and Jean Paul Gaultier’s mesh tattooed pieces, two of which are included in the exhibition.