6 Things To Know About Robert Wun, The Designer Who Won The Met Gala

The Met Gala is inarguably fashion's biggest night of the year. The first Monday of May, entertainment's brightest gather on the Metropolitan Museum of Art's steps to celebrate fashion, art, and our most-lauded designers of the moment. And while the larger houses often have the biggest tables and presence, once in a while, someone else will cut through the noise with their designs alone. This year, that someone was Robert Wun, the Hong Kong born couturier responsible for countless best-dressed moments on the 2026 Met Gala red carpet.
In honor of Wun's incredible red carpet sweep—and that Met curator Andrew Bolton has added three of Wun’s works to the exhibition’s permanent collection—here are six things to know about the designer who won this year's Met Gala.
1. He Made His Runway Debut On The Paris Couture Calendar

Back in 2023, Robert Wun recieved a unanimous vote from the Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode, which fast-tracked the London-based designer to show his first-ever runway show on the official Haute Couture calendar at Paris Fashion Week. After graduating from the London College of Fashion and launching his namesake brand in 2014, Wun's career changed overnight after mentorship from Bruno Pavlovsky, Chanel’s President of Fashion, and glowing endorsements from other high-profile fashion industry folks. He is also the first designer from Hong Kong to ever be on the couture calendar.
2. He's Behind Naomi Osaka's Viral Australian Open Look

Naomi Osaka has always had a strong tie to fashion, but when she arrived at the 2026 Australian Open in January, her veiled on-court look caused quite a stir. Collaborating with Wun, the tennis player wore a tiered, pleated mini skirt layered over wide-legged trousers, topped with a gauzy veil that floated from a white wide-brimmed hat. She accessorized with a parasol, which was adorned with butterflies (as was the hat).
3. His First Met Gala Was In 2023

One thing about Robert Wun is that his ties to female athletes is strong. In 2023, the designer's first foray into a Met look was with Eileen Gu, the skier and Olympic medalist who wore a white satin wine stained wedding gown designed by the couturier.
4. This Year, He Focused On Sculpture

For this year's Met Gala, Wun undertook the massive task of creating custom looks for eight attendees, including Lisa Manoban, Naomi Osaka, and Jordan Roth. Across the multiple looks, a theme emerged of limbs and hands. For Manoban's look, Wun's team created 3D-scans of her arms, draping them in an embellished veil inspired by traditional Thai dance positions. For Roth, his high necked velvet gown was accompanied by a mannequin-like sculpture embracing him from behind. Thai consultant and editor Nichapat Suphap wore a black mermaid silhouette gown, which was reportedly inspired by Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam fresco painting. Together with kinetic artist Casey Curran, the artist created the moving hands that were pinned across the bodice.
5. Naomi Osaka's Look Was A Meditation On Anatomy, Exposed


Building on his Spring 2023 couture language for Osaka's 2026 Met Gala look, Wun returned to the exploration of garments that appear sliced open to reveal what sits beneath. On the carpet, Osaka arrived in a structured white coat with feathered details erupting from the openings to mimic blood. At the top of the steps, Osaka then removed her coat, revealing a red, sequin dress in an abstract interpretation of human anatomy, aligning with the exhibition ideas of “The Naked Body” and “The Classic Body.” The dress itself consisted of 659,000 stitches of intricate embroidery and thousands of faceted Swarovski crystals in four shades of red, totalling over 3,280 hours of handwork.
His Signature Themes Focus On Destruction, Fantasy, And The Body

Throughout all of his collections, you will find Robert Wun signatures that consist of distressed dresses that have been victim to burn marks or blood spills, sculptural silhouettes that either expose the body or emphasize the body, and fantastical shapes that transport you to another realm. These are the ways in which Wun explores visibility and liberation within fashion and design, through boundary-defying couture that bends our understanding of what is possible and acceptable, making his work perfectly fitting with this year's Met Gala theme.