NEW YORK April 30 — A poster campaign opposing Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s involvement in the upcoming Met Gala cropped up across New York’s streets and subways yesterday, calling for a boycott of the star-studded event.Bezos and his wife Lauren Sanchez Bezos are lead sponsors and honorary co-chairs of the high-profile fundraising event, to be held May 4, which draws A-listers across entertainment, sport, fashion and business.But the billionaire couple’s stake in
NEW YORK April 30 — A poster campaign opposing Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s involvement in the upcoming Met Gala cropped up across New York’s streets and subways yesterday, calling for a boycott of the star-studded event.
Bezos and his wife Lauren Sanchez Bezos are lead sponsors and honorary co-chairs of the high-profile fundraising event, to be held May 4, which draws A-listers across entertainment, sport, fashion and business.
But the billionaire couple’s stake in the gala has angered activists, who primarily oppose Bezos’s business practices.
One poster depicts a bottle filled with urine on a red carpet — a reference to some Amazon drivers having to urinate in bottles due to a lack of bathroom breaks.
Another portrays Bezos in a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) uniform, as Amazon’s cloud computing subsidiary has a contract with the divisive agency leading President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.
Behind the campaign is a group founded in Britain called “Everyone Hates Elon” — which, a spokesman stressed, “also targets other billionaires” beyond Elon Musk, the world’s richest person.
“I think it feels really powerful to take action,” said the spokesman, who asked for anonymity due to fears of retaliation.
“I think it’s speaking to a need that people have to stand up to some of these people that are controlling our lives.”
The group says it has received more than £14,000 (RM75,000) to fund its campaign in New York — mainly from small donations averaging 10 pounds.
The Met Gala is often criticized for its displays of immense wealth and has previously drawn protests over economic inequality, environmental concerns, and the war in Gaza. — AFP
Evan Agostini/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThere may be nothing Sarah Jessica Parker loves more than a theme. While most attendees at the Met Gala take the dress code as just a light suggestion, Parker always commits. For 2013’s “Punk: Chaos to Couture” exhibit, the actress arrived in a printed Giles Deacon gown with thigh-high plaid Christian Louboutin boots, topped off with a Philip Treacy-designed mohawk headdress. It was a look she herself would outdo just two years later at the “C
There may be nothing Sarah Jessica Parker loves more than a theme. While most attendees at the Met Gala take the dress code as just a light suggestion, Parker always commits. For 2013’s “Punk: Chaos to Couture” exhibit, the actress arrived in a printed Giles Deacon gown with thigh-high plaid Christian Louboutin boots, topped off with a Philip Treacy-designed mohawk headdress. It was a look she herself would outdo just two years later at the “China: Through the Looking Glass” themed gala in 2015, where she teamed her H&M dress with another headpiece by Treacy, this one made to look like flames were erupting out of her head. It was a look that spurned 1,000 memes—and, really, what more can you ask for from the Met Gala red carpet?
Of course, then there are the actor’s more poignant Met moments—like when she paid homage to Elizabeth Hobbs Keckley, a freed slave who went on to become First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln’s dressmaker, in 2022. Or her 2011 look, which honored her late friend Lee McQueen. As of now, there’s no word on whether or not Parker will be attending the event in 2026, but as we wait to see, let’s look through each and every one of the actor’s Met Gala looks over the years.
2024: “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion”
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Sarah Jessica Parker’s Richard Quinn dress features hand-cut lace appliquéd over a wire frame, creating a fragility that played into the year’s theme and dress code, “Garden of Time.” Parker was inspired to work with Quinn on the dress after he got involved with looks for And Just Like That.
2022: “In America: An Anthology of Fashion”
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The “In America: An Anthology of Fashion” Met Gala in 2022 propelled Parker to channel an important piece of American fashion history. Her custom Christopher John Rogers dress was inspired by Elizabeth Hobbs Keckley, a freed slave who went on to become First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln’s dressmaker.
2018: “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination”
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Dolce & Gabbana had the honor of outfitting Parker for the 2018 Met Gala. Naturally, she wore a Neapolitan nativity scene on her head as an homage to the “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination” dress code.
2016: “Manus x Machina: Fashion in an Age of Technology”
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Although Parker usually wears a large gown to the Met, she mixed things up drastically with her 2016 outfit. The actor slipped into capri pants from Monse that she paired with tousled hair, a simple tank top, and a theatrical jacket. Mismatched heels—a classic Carrie Bradshaw styling trick—finished her look.
2015: “China: Through the Looking Glass”
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Parker’s H&M ensemble and flame-like Philip Treacy hat was one of the more talked-about looks of the 2015 Met Gala.
2014: “Charles James: Beyond Fashion”
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In 2014, the actor picked out a two-tone Oscar de la Renta gown and white opera gloves.
2013: “Punk: Chaos to Couture”
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Parker went all out for the 2013 punk-themed Met Gala. She wore an abstract Giles Deacon dress that she paired with a Philip Treacy mohawk hat, which was so tall that it required her to sit on the floor of her car as she made her way to the museum.
2012: “Schiaparelli and Prada: Impossible Conversations”
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Parker paired her floral Valentino dress with thick gold bangles at the 2012 ball.
2011: “Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty”
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The 2011 Met Gala honored Alexander McQueen and Parker chose to dip into the late great’s archives for the occasion. She wore a blinged-out dress from the designer’s fall 2005 collection.
2010: “American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity”
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As a nod to the 2010 exhibition “American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity,” Parker wore a pleated Halston Heritage dress that was asking to be danced in.
2006: “AngloMania: Tradition and Transgression in British Fashion”
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In 2006, the actor arrived at the Met steps on the arm of the late Alexander McQueen. Her tartan tutu dress? The perfect interpretation of the night’s “AngloMania” theme.
1995: “Haute Couture”
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For her Met Gala debut, Parker went the simple route in an empire waist cocktail dress that she picked up at a thrift shop.
Photo by Billy Farrell/Patrick McMullan via Getty ImagesNicole Kidman may not be the most regular of Met Gala attendees (she’s only gone six times...so far). And while that may seem like a lot, for someone who has been in the public eye as long as Kidman, it’s pretty sparse. That being said, when the actor does attend, she does so with style and authority. On two of the occasions she’s walked the Met carpet, she not only cohosted, but was dressed by her fellow cohosts, Karl Lagerfeld and Tom For
Photo by Billy Farrell/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images
Nicole Kidman may not be the most regular of Met Gala attendees (she’s only gone six times...so far). And while that may seem like a lot, for someone who has been in the public eye as long as Kidman, it’s pretty sparse. That being said, when the actor does attend, she does so with style and authority. On two of the occasions she’s walked the Met carpet, she not only cohosted, but was dressed by her fellow cohosts, Karl Lagerfeld and Tom Ford (the latter, during his Gucci era). This year, Kidman is once again taking on co-hosting duty, meaning a return to the steps is imminent. Will she wear Balenciaga for the third time in a row? Or, surprise us all and go in a completely different direction? While we wait and see, let’s take a look back at Kidman’s Met Gala sartorial history.
2025: “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style”
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Nicole Kidman paired her drop-waist, tea-length Balenciaga couture dress with a short ’do at the 2025 Met Gala.
2024: “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion”
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Kidman also wore Balenciaga to the 2024 event. Her dress—designed by Demna—was inspired by one created by Cristobal Balenciaga himself for the house’s spring 1951 collection. The original was made famous by supermodel Dorian Leigh in a Harper’s Bazaar image by Richard Avedon. This new version took 800 hours of hand embroidery and the application of 150 meters of silk organza to create. “The gown creates a natural full circle moment of time—it’s a celebration of Richard’s work that will live on, but also, an acknowledgment of Balenciaga’s artistic vision that continues to seamlessly blend the illusion of past, present, and future,” Kidman told Vogue.
2023: “Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty”
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Prior to 2023, Kidman hadn’t shown up to the Met Gala in several years. But she RSVP’d “Yes” to the year that celebrated Karl Lagerfeld. As anyone with a television in the early ‘00s remembers, Kidman was the face of Chanel No. 5 and starred in a lavish commercial for the fragrance.
Kidman certainly remembered. She re-wore one of the dresses from that very commercial.
The night also gave her a chance to reunite with Baz Luhrmann who not only directed that Chanel ad, but also Moulin Rouge.
2016: “Manus x Machina: Fashion in an Age of Technology”
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In 2016, Nicole Kidman wore an Alexander McQueen gown that was quite literally celestial. Creative director Sarah Burton customized the dress based on a sheer version that was shown during the brand’s fall 2016 runway show.
Photo by Michael Stewart/WireImage
The gown’s elaborate cape added to the drama without resembling a costume. The look drew comparisons to the classic Art Deco-era work of the Russian-French artist and designer Erté.
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The year was also notable as it marked the first year Kidman attended the Met Gala with a date from her personal romantic life. She brought then-husband Keith Urban, who let his wife take all the attention by opting for a classic white-tie tuxedo.
2005: “The House of Chanel”
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Karl Lagerfeld famously did not consent to a retrospective of his own career during his lifetime, but he did cohost the Met Gala alongside Kidman in 2005 for an exhibition and gala dedicated to the history of the House of Chanel. Kidman, of course, was then the face of the brand’s iconic fragrance, Chanel No. 5. And naturally, she showed up in Chanel haute couture.
Photo by Fairchild Archive/Penske Media via Getty Images
The gown came with a few hidden tricks. It had a dramatic leg slit and was lined in silver. If you appreciate no other detail, please take note of the fact that the silver lining matches Lagerfeld’s fingerless gloves.
Photo by Billy Farrell/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images
Kidman truly leaned into proper hosting duties. Here, she, Lagerfeld, and Wintour greet Michael Kors and his date for the evening, Jessica Simpson.
2003: “Goddess: The Classical Mode”
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Kidman was not only one of the earliest A-listers to spot Tom Ford’s talent at Gucci, but she cohosted the 2003 event alongside him. That year was a tribute to “Goddesses,” and Kidman certainly dressed like one in a gown that was a perfect exemplification of Ford’s knack for sophisticated sex appeal. Kidman was all covered up, but the draping of the dress recalled bosom-baring classical sculptures.
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Long before the “Jason Derulo has fallen down the stairs at the Met Gala” meme existed, Adrian Brody actually did take a tumble at the Met. Don’t worry, everything was fine—but the moment did provide a nice look at the back of Kidman’s gown.
Photo by Fairchild Archive/Penske Media via Getty Images
Once again, she was on her best hosting manors alongside Wintour, Ford, and Brody. For the record, though they stuck close together that night, Kidman and Brody never dated. However, they had both just won their Oscars a few months before.
Photo by Fairchild Archive/Penske Media via Getty Images
Kidman was in good company that night. Ford also dressed another goddess, Diana Ross.
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesTeyana Taylor is a relative newcomer to the Met Gala. The Oscar-nominated actor only attended her first in 2021, but in just five years, she’s proven she deserves the elusive invite. Starting with an ab-baring Prabal Gurung dress in 2021, Taylor has managed to stick to the theme each year while still maintaining her style integrity. Last year, she took the biggest risk of all, attending “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” in an over-the-t
Teyana Taylor is a relative newcomer to the Met Gala. The Oscar-nominated actor only attended her first in 2021, but in just five years, she’s proven she deserves the elusive invite. Starting with an ab-baring Prabal Gurung dress in 2021, Taylor has managed to stick to the theme each year while still maintaining her style integrity. Last year, she took the biggest risk of all, attending “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” in an over-the-top look designed by famed costume designer Ruth E. Carter.
Luckily, we know 2026 will include another appearance from Taylor. The actor is on the event’s host committee, so she’s guaranteed an invite. And considering the theme revolves around the body as a canvas, we can assume Taylor will take the opportunity to show off her famous figure. We could be wrong, however. So, while we wait to see what Taylor wears for this trip up the Met steps, let’s take a look back at her Gala track record.
2025: “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style”
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Teyana Taylor made quite the statement at the 2025 Met Gala. The multi-hyphenate wore an extravagant look created by Oscar-winning costume designer Ruth E. Carter, inspired by Taylor’s 2018 song, “Rose in Harlem.”
Taylor paid homage to the late Karl Lagerfeld at the 2023 Met Gala in a custom Thom Browne tweed look with hip cut-outs.
2022: “In America: An Anthology of Fashion”
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In 2022, Taylor walked the Met steps in an ethereal Iris Van Herpen design.
2021: “In America: A Lexicon of Fashion”
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Taylor is known for showing off her abs, so it’s surprising she has only done so once at the Met Gala. The singer attended for the first time in 2021, wearing a barely-there Prabal Gurung silver gown. But what the dress lacked in a bodice, it made up for in train, as multiple yards of silver fabric followed Taylor throughout the night.
Theo Wargo/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesIn 2008, when Zoë Kravitz was just 19 years old, she attended her first Met Gala. The actor has walked the Met steps a total of ten times, leaving her mark on the carpet with each ascension. Of course, Kravitz’s style has changed a lot in the 18 years since her first appearance. Early on in her Met career, the actor wore simpler looks created for her by designers like Alexander Wang and Derek Lam. In 2016, she took her first big swing with a Vale
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In 2008, when Zoë Kravitz was just 19 years old, she attended her first Met Gala. The actor has walked the Met steps a total of ten times, leaving her mark on the carpet with each ascension. Of course, Kravitz’s style has changed a lot in the 18 years since her first appearance. Early on in her Met career, the actor wore simpler looks created for her by designers like Alexander Wang and Derek Lam. In 2016, she took her first big swing with a Valentino couture mini dress, but it wasn’t until 2018 that she really hit her stride. That was the year when Saint Laurent started dressing Kravitz for the Met Gala, and since then, the actor hasn’t trusted anyone else with the job.
Kravitz hasn’t attended the Gala since 2021, but she will be there this year, and it’s safe to assume we will see her in another Anthony Vaccarello dress. The two are co-chairs of the host committee, meaning even more eyes will be on Kravitz than usual. So, while we wait to see what she brings to the 2026 event, let’s look back at all ten of Kravitz’s Met Gala looks from the past.
2021: “America: A Lexicon Of Fashion”
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Zoë Kravitz attended the 2021 Met Gala in a slinky Saint Laurent dress.
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The piece was completely see-through, which became all the more obvious when the actor turned around.
In 2019, Kravitz covered up a little bit more, arriving to the pink carpet in another Saint Laurent creation. This one was covered in oily black sequins and featured a unique bust cutout and neckline.
2018: “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion & the Catholic Imagination”
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The actor’s history of showing a lot of skin at the Met Gala can be traced back to 2018. That year, Kravitz attended the event in a one-armed, lace Saint Laurent dress with just two bows holding up the side.
2017: “Rei Kawakubo/Comme des Garçons: Art Of The In-Between”
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Kravitz prioritized drama at the 2017 Met Gala, attending in a pale pink Oscar de la Renta gown with a cape that followed her as she ascended the stars.
2016: “Manus x Machina: Fashion in an Age of Technology”
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While from the front, Kravitz’s Valentino fall 2010 haute couture dress seems pretty simple, the back revealed a giant bow that looked like wings from some angles.
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Kravitz paired the mini with some tulle-covered shoes and a lace face mask from the same Valentino collection.
In 2015, Kravitz wore a silver chainmail dress designed by Alexander Wang.
2014: “Charles James: Beyond Fashion”
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A blonde bobbed Kravitz attended the Met Gala in 2014 wearing a low-cut red dress with a thigh slit from Topshop.
2011: “Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty”
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A 22-year-old Kravitz wore a Derek Lam two-toned dress to the 2011 event.
2010: “American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity”
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Kravitz wore her most casual Met Gala look in 2010, a white tank and black column skirt from Alexander Wang for Gap, which she paired with a python skin clutch.
2008: “Superheroes: Fashion And Fantasy”
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The actor attended her first Met Gala in 2008, wearing a mint green velvet dress and fur stole that could have been plucked straight out of the Roaring ’20s.
Billy Porter won’t be striking a pose at the 2026 Met Gala.
Though the Emmy winner has built a reputation for his eclectic red carpet fashion, he revealed he won’t be present during fashion’s...
Billy Porter won’t be striking a pose at the 2026 Met Gala.
Though the Emmy winner has built a reputation for his eclectic red carpet fashion, he revealed he won’t be present during fashion’s...
This year, the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Exhibition is all about “Costume Art.” Inspired by the museum’s vast collection, the show will dissect the idea of the dressed body and the relationship between clothing and the human form in art. Though, the exploration of fashion’s relationship with traditional art is hardly a new phenomenon. For centuries, the two forms have been pulling inspiration from one another, often dipping into the same source of aesthetic inspiration. For examples,
This year, the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Exhibition is all about “Costume Art.” Inspired by the museum’s vast collection, the show will dissect the idea of the dressed body and the relationship between clothing and the human form in art.
Though, the exploration of fashion’s relationship with traditional art is hardly a new phenomenon. For centuries, the two forms have been pulling inspiration from one another, often dipping into the same source of aesthetic inspiration. For examples, 18th century movements like Rococo, Neoclassicism, Romanticism shifted both art and fashion with equal fervor. In more recent times, this pattern has continued, as designers have looked to the art world—or, in some cases, worked directly with artists—for inspiration. The first of such collaborations in modern history dates back to Elsa Schiaparelli’s frequent collaborations with Salvador Dalí in the 1930s, during which the two created many kooky, surreal works together that pushed the boundaries of Great Depression Era dressing. A few decades later, Yves Saint Laurent began creating a whole museum worth of art-adjacent designs, a practice that continued throughout his career. Even this most recent fashion month featured a number of art references, including Rachel Scott’s collection for Diotima. The designer worked with the estate of the late Cuban artist Wilfredo Lam for her fall/winter 2026 show.
It can be expected that some of these joint efforts will make appearances at the Met on May 4, both on the red carpet and within the exhibition. So, to prepare you for the many conversations surrounding art’s influence on fashion, sure to take over as the Met Gala creeps forward, we’re looking back on some of the most memorable art references in fashion over the past 100 years.
Elsa Schiaparelli x Salvador Dalí
Clockwise from top left: Wallis Simpson in the Lobster dress; The Lobster dress on display at Musee Des Arts Decoratifs; Salvador Dalí, Lobster Telephone, 1938. | Clockwise from top left: Cecil Beaton/Condé Nast via Getty Images; ISABEL INFANTES/AFP via Getty Images; hierry Chesnot/Getty Images
One of the first designer/artist collaborations of the modern era was between Elsa Schiaparelli and Salvador Dalí, two artists who bonded over their love of surrealism. There are many pieces that successfully represent this partnership, including the Lobster Dress, Tears Dress, and Shoe Hat. But the first piece they made together was actually a compact powder case, designed to look like a rotary phone dial.
In 1937, the duo created what is likely their most famous collaborative creation, the Lobster Dress, a silk evening gown featuring a large lobster painted on the skirt, inspired by Dalí’s 1936 piece, Lobster Telephone. The dress was part of the 18-piece trousseau Schiaparelli designed for Wallis Simpson following her marriage to the Duke of Windsor. It is currently on view at the V&A’s Schiaparelli exhibition, cementing its legacy within the designer’s archives.
Dalí was hardly the only artist who worked with Schiaparelli during the height of her career, however. Alberto Giacometti designed a series of brooches and buttons for her, and Christian Bérard, Etienne Drian, and Marcel Vertès all created prints at one time or another.
Yves Saint Laurent Autumn/Winter 1965 x Piet Mondrian
Left: Tableau I, Plate I, Mondira, 1921. Right: Saint Laurent’s 1965 Mondrian dress during the house’s spring/summer 2002 retrospective show. | Left: Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images. Right: Photo by Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Yves Saint Laurent was inspired by art at many points throughout his career, but likely his most famous iteration is the line of cocktail dresses based on Piet Mondrian’s geometrical work. In 1965, as part of the autumn/winter collection, Saint Laurent sent 26 Mondrian-like cocktail dresses down the runway. He was inspired by a book his mother gave him for Christmas, Piet Mondrian Sa vie, son œuvre by Michel Seuphor (1956). While the designs looked simple, the technical prowess needed to create the solid colors, black borders, and simple lines while maintaining virtual seamlessness was an impressive feat.
Yves Saint Laurent Autumn/Winter 1966 x Tom Wesselmann
A year later and Saint Laurent’s captivation with art was still in full force, though it pivoted to the world of Pop Art. The designer sent many color-blocked dresses down the runway of his autumn/winter 1966 show, inspired by the movement. He then ended the show with two designs inspired by Tom Wesselmann and the cutout effect used in his work.
Yves Saint Laurent Autumn/Winter 1979 x Pablo Picasso
There are a few designers who will show up on this list a lot, thanks to their affinity and appreciation for art. Saint Laurent is one of them. He was often looking to the art world for inspiration. In 1979, his eye turned to renowned artist Pablo Picasso, who had just died six years prior.
The designer’s autumn/winter 1979 collection was an homage to Serge Diaghilev, the Russian art critic and founder of Ballets Russes. Diaghilev and Picasso formed a close bond, and Picasso designed the sets and costumes for some of Diaghilev’s ballets. It was specifically the ballet, Parade, presented at the Théâtre du Châtelet in 1917, which Saint Laurent looked toward, and many of the harlequin dresses within the collection come from that reference. But he also pushed further into Picasso’s work, specifically to a 1937 painting, Portrait de Nusch Éluard. Saint Laurent recreated the jacket in the piece and presented it alongside the rest of the Diaghilev collection.
Yves Saint Laurent Autumn/Winter 1981 x Henri Matisse and Fernand Léger
It was a common practice for Saint Laurent to recreate clothing depicted in artwork, just like he did with the jacket in Picasso’s Portrait de Nusch Éluard. In 1981, the designer took a similar approach, sending a handful of hand-painted Romanian folk blouses down the autumn/winter runway, inspired by Henri Matisse, and the clothing illustrated in work like his 1940 painting, La Blouse Roumaine. The style would become a signature for the House, with Saint Laurent, as well as subsequent creative directors, revisiting the top many times over the years.
But Matisse wasn’t the only artist who inspired the autumn/winter 1981 collection. Saint Laurent also looked to cubist artist Fernand Léger, and the designer covered voluminous skirts in colorful cutout shapes reminiscent of both artists’ work.
Yves Saint Laurent Spring/Summer 1988 x Vincent Van Gough
Left: Vincent Van Gogh, Sunflowers, 1888. Right: Yves Saint Laurent Spring/Summer 1988. | Left: Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images. Right: Bertrand Rindoff Petroff/Getty Images
The spring/summer 1988 season brought with it another YSL collection inspired by a famous artist, this time Vincent Van Gogh. Specifically, the Dutch painter’s famed floral paintings, Irises and Sunflowers. Saint Laurent worked with the Parisian embroidery house Maison Lesage to create these jackets. Each one is impressively intricate—made of pearls, ribbons, sequins, and bugle beads—and took over six hundred hours of work. The Irises jacket alone featured 250,000 sequins in twenty-two colors. In 2019, the Sunflowers jacket—originally modeled by Naomi Campbell on the runway—sold at auction for 382,000 euros, while the Irises version earned 175,500 euros.
But Van Gogh wasn’t even the only artist to be referenced in Saint Laurent’s spring 1988 collection. The designer also showed looks based on works by Georges Braque and his bird paintings.
Versace Spring/Summer 1991 x Andy Warhol
Left: Andy Warhol, Lemon Marilyn, 1962. Right: Versace Spring/Summer 1991. | Left: Lewis Whyld - PA Images/PA Images via Getty Images. Right: George Rose/Getty Images
Gianni Versace had the pleasure of meeting Andy Warhol when he visited New York for the first time and the two became friends. Warhol even made portraits of the late designer, which were once used for invitations to a Versace fashion show and now decorate Donatella Versace’s house.
Gianni is said to have been enamored with Warhol’s media awareness, but he was also a fan of his work. In 1991, Gianni presented a collection of pieces covered in Warhol’s art, specifically portraits of Marilyn Monroe and James Dean. The collection was such a hit, one dress from the bunch now sits in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, while others are still worn to this day. In 2018, Donatella even brought back the print as part of a tribute collection for her brother.
Vivienne Westwood x The Wallace Collection
Left: François Boucher, Portrait of Madame de Pompadour, 1759. Right: Vivienne Westwood fall 1995. | Left: The Print Collector/Print Collector/Getty Images. Right: Guy Marineau/Condé Nast via Getty Images
Vivienne Westwood’s obsession with art extended far beyond a single look or a one-off collection. The designer was especially taken by the London museum, The Wallace Collection, and often looked to its archive for prints. It was the French Rococo painter, François Boucher, though, who seemed to inspire Westwood the most. She first referenced his work at her autumn/winter 1990 show, where she printed Boucher’s 18th-century painting, Daphnis and Chloe, across dresses, corsets, and other articles of clothing. It was known as The Portrait Collection, and it started a movement for the brand, which is now known for these printed corsets. “I wanted the look of a model who'd just stepped out of a portrait,” Westwood said, adding that she chose Boucher, specifically, because his work is so “typical and so pretty.”
Following that collection, Westwood continued to pull inspiration and imagery from The Wallace Collection. During the spring/summer 1993 season, it was time for the painting Hercules and Omphale to have its moment on the runway. She also used Abduction of Europa as well as Jean-Honoré Fragonard’s The Swarm of Cherubs and The Swing.
Westwood also produced dresses inspired by pieces in Boucher’s paintings. In her 1995 show, Vive La Cocette, she recreated a gown from Boucher’s 1759 portrait of Madame de Pompadour. She returned to the artist and subject in her fall/winter 2002/2003 collection, designing another—this time more subdued—gown from a 1758 portrait of Madame by Boucher.
To this day, Vivienne Tam’s spring 1995 collection remains one of her most impactful. Dubbed the “Mao Collection,” Tam worked with Chinese artist Zhang Hongtu on a series of t-shirts, dresses, and matching sets featuring Mao Zedong, the founding father of the People’s Republic of China and former chairman of the Communist Party of China. The designs are extremely irreverent, with images depicting Mao in ponytails and a frilly collar or smeared with lipstick. It was, of course, a controversial collection, considering its overtly political nature, but it has stood the test of time and is still coveted to this day.
Issey Mikaye Fall/Winter 1996/1997 x Yasumasa Morimura
Three years after launching his Pleats Please line in 1993, Issey Miyake introduced the Guest Artist Series where he collaborated with artists on pieces for the collection. The series kicked off with the help of Japanese photographer Yasumasa Morimura. Known for his reinterpretations of classic art, the works Miyake used in 1996 saw Morimura place himself within Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres's 1856 painting, La Source. Possibly the most recognized piece from the collection features an inverted image of Morimura set below the nude from the painting.
The Guest Artist Series would continue on for a few more years, featuring works by Nobuyoshi Araki, Tim Hawkinson, and Cai Guo Qiang.
Louis Vuitton x Takashi Murakami
Left: Takashi Murakami, Panda, Panda Cubs and Flower Ball, 2019. Right: A Louis Vuitton x Takashi Murakami bag. | Left: By Carlos Avila Gonzalez/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images. Right: Courtesy of Louis Vuitton
A list of fashion’s art world references just wouldn’t be complete without the Louis Vuitton x Takashi Murakami collection. Six years into his tenure at LV, Marc Jacobs already had two successful artist collaborations under his belt, with Stephen Sprouse in 2001 and Julie Verhoeven in 2002. But when he tapped Japanese artist Murakami to reimagine the classic brand monogram in his style, he hit gold. Murakami created the now iconic candy-colored designs, featuring flowers, cherries, and Murakami’s beloved “Creatures from Planet 66.” The limited-edition collection sold out in just hours and was suddenly on the arms of every It girl, including Mean Girls’sRegina George. Two decades later, and it was time to bring Murakami back into the fold. In 2024, LV released a re-edition of the collection, featuring both old and updated designs, pushing the collaboration even further into belts, sneakers, scarves, wallets, and sunglasses.
Jean Paul Gaultier Spring 2003 Couture x Edgar Degas
Left: Edgar Degas, Dancer with a Bouquet, 1877. Right: Jean Paul Gaultier Spring 2003 couture. | Left: DeAgostini/Getty Images. Right: Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
If this dress from Jean Paul Gaultier’s spring 2003 couture collection looks familiar, there are likely two reasons. One, because it features scenes from Edgar Degas’s famous ballerina paintings. But you also might recognize it because Chappell Roan wore the dress to the Grammys last year.
Louis Vuitton x Yayoi Kusama
Left: Yayoi Kusama, The Spirits of the Pumpkins Descended Into the Heavens, 2017. Right: Louis Vuitton x Yayoi Kusama heels. | Left: Adam Berry/Getty Images. Right: Monica McKlinski/Getty Images
One of the most iconic and well-known designer/artist collaborations of the 21st century is undoubtedly the one between Marc Jacobs’s Louis Vuitton and Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama. Together, the pair created a collection covered in Kusama’s signature polka dots, placing the pattern on everything from dresses to, of course, handbags.
Jacobs initially met Kusama during a trip to Japan in 2006 after admiring the artist's work for years. Their collection, however, wouldn’t come to fruition for six more years until 2012, with its launch coinciding with a number of Kusama exhibitions, including a retrospective at the Whitney Museum in New York, sponsored by Louis Vuitton. The collection was a major success, so much so that, in 2023, LV worked with Kusama again on a second one.
Raf Simons has collaborated with many people over the years while designing for his eponymous brand, Calvin Klein, and Dior. He has used the work of Sterling Ruby, Peter De Potter, and Willy Vanderperre on various collections, but it was his designs featuring paintings by Brian Calvin that were the most impactful. Perhaps that’s because Calvin’s work can be unsettling at times. His cubist-adjacent 2D paintings peeked out through a pink jacket, inviting the viewer to come closer, if they dare.
Valentino Spring/Summer 2017 x The Garden of Earthly Delights
Left: Hieronymus Bosch, The Garden of Earthly Delights, 1490-1510. Right: Valentino Spring/Summer 2017. | Left: Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images. Right: Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
There was a lot of pressure on Pierpaolo Piccioli ahead of the Valentino spring/summer 2017 show. His longtime collaborator, Maria Grazia Chiuri, had left for Dior, and he was on his own for the first time. So, Piccioli turned to medieval art, specifically, the work of Hieronymus Bosch and his triptych, The Garden of Earthly Delights, for some support. He commissioned designer Zandra Rhodes to create prints based on the work, sending diaphanous, sheer gowns sprinkled with the depictions of paradise down the runway.
Louis Vuitton x Jeff Koons
Louis Vuitton x Jeff Koons bags. | Left: Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images. Right: Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images Images
Louis Vuitton continued to build on the arty bag legacy started by Jacobs in the 2000s and, in 2017, released a collaboration with American artist Jeff Koons. Surprisingly though, Koons’s own creations were completely missing from the 51-piece collection, which saw classic works of art emblazoned on various LV bags.
Inspired by Koons’s 2015 Gazing Ball series, the collections placed art by Van Gogh, Leonardo da Vinci, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, and more artists on LV’s most popular accessories. If there is any question as to who painted these iconic works, the pieces were then finished off with the artists’ names in large metal letters across the front.
Calvin Klein Spring 2018 x Andy Warhol
Left: Andy Warhol, White Disaster [White Car Crash 19 Times], 1963. Right: Calvin Klein Spring 2018. | Left: ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images. Right: Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Raf Simons worked with the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts on his spring 2018 collection for Calvin Klein. The designer was inspired by horror films, specifically their “depictions of both an American nightmare, and the all-powerful American dream,” as he explained in the show notes. Using graphics from Warhol’s Death and Disaster series, Simons printed images of car crashes upon shift dresses and Sandra Brant’s face on tank tops while Brant herself watched from the show’s front row.
Comme des Garçons Spring 2018 x Giuseppe Arcimboldo
Left: Giuseppe Arcimboldo, Vertumnus, 1591. Right: Comme des Garçons Spring 2018. | Left: Imagno/Getty Images. Right: Estrop / Contributor
In 2017, Rei Kawakubo presented her usually bulbous, avant-garde silhouettes, this time rendered in an array of colorful, eye-catching patterns. Abstract colors, anime, and childlike maps covered the designer’s radical shapes. There was little to no theme among the patterns aside from explosive color, offset by a few all-white ensembles. Two pieces from the collection boasted paintings by 16th-century Italian artist Giuseppe Arcimboldo, known for depicting figures with heads made of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and fish. His 1591 portrait of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, called Vertumnus, therefore, fit perfectly as a pattern within the collection.
Moschino Spring/Summer 2020 x Pablo Picasso
Left: Pablo Picasso, Guitar, 1914. Right: Moschino Spring/Summer 2020. | Left: JOEL SAGET/AFP via Getty Images. Right: Pietro D'Aprano/Getty Images
Throughout his tenure at Moschino, Jeremy Scott often looked to the art world for inspiration, interpreting classic works in extremely literal ways. For Moschino’s spring/summer 2020 collection, Scott turned his gaze toward Pablo Picasso.
Scott managed to represent an impressive amount of Picasso’s oeuvre in the collection. It was truly a night at the museum where works of art came to life and strutted right by you, before returning to their stagnant life. Kaia Gerber walked the runway in a 3D rendering of the 1914 work Guitar, while Bella Hadid was dressed like a harlequin who walked right out of one of the Spanish artist’s paintings. There were references to Girl Before a Mirror (1932) and the larger cubist movement. Models walked through giant gold frames, while some carried them on the runway. There were also matadors and a cubist-adjacent bull mask thanks to milliner Stephen Jones.
Diotima Fall 2026 x Wifredo Lam
Left: Wifredo Lam, Omi Obini, 1943. Right: Diotima Fall/Winter 2026. | Left: Cindy Ord/Getty Images. Right: Giovanni Giannoni/WWD via Getty Images
Rachel Scott’s most recent collection for Diotima was inspired by the Cuban artist Wilfredo Lam. In her show notes, Scott wrote that Lam’s “visual language carries a consciousness that resonates deeply with my own.”
The designer worked with Lam’s estate on the collection, using versions of his Femme Cheval paintings as well as the 1943 work Omi Obini. One of the Femme Chevals was rendered in fluffy organza to create a halter dress and maxi skirt, while Omi Obini was desaturated and placed on a jacket and wrap skirt.