Current:Home > InvestAll eyes on The Met: What celebs will see inside Monday's high-fashion gala -Streamline Finance
All eyes on The Met: What celebs will see inside Monday's high-fashion gala
View
Date:2025-04-12 14:09:48
NEW YORK − The line between high fashion and nature is blurred throughout the Metropolitan Museum of Art's newest exhibit "Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion." The exhibition is the centerpiece of this year's Met Gala, an event that has become so eclipsed by celebrity it can be hard to remember it's actually a fundraiser for the museum's Costume Institute.
Once A-listers climb those famed steps, the public is shut out of what lies inside. Attendees − handpicked by Anna Wintour, Vogue editor-in-chief and an elective trustee of the institute − are not permitted to broadcast from the party. As a result, the Met Gala is both extremely public and extremely private. While we can't tell you which celebs will inevitably pose for bathroom selfies or exchange flirtatious glances, we can reveal the art they'll take in.
Here's a rundown on "Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion."
Zendaya teases Met Gala 2024 lookHow her red carpet moments made her a fashion darling
The Met Gala theme, explained by its creators
"When a work of fashion enters into the Met’s collection something happens: it becomes an object," Met director and CEO Max Hollein said in remarks delivered at a press preview Monday morning. "We can no longer wear it, we can no longer touch it, we can no longer feel it. We don’t feel it and we can’t even smell it. Not in the way the original creator has intended,” he continued.
Hollein is laying out the internal logic of the exhibit, which seems to be − fashion is to be felt, not just admired, and no number of years passed should preclude that original purpose. While you cannot touch the clothing on display, the museum has created clever ways to allow visitors to experience the fashion through all senses.
Drawn exclusively from the Met’s permanent collection, the exhibition houses some 220 pieces dating back to the 17th century, head curator Andrew Bolton told the crowd Monday. Many of the galleries showcase a "sleeping beauty" or a dress lying flat, too delicate to even stretch around a mannequin for display.
The exhibit isn't all antiquity though, there's plenty of modern design and technology at play.
Tech is the key to "reawakening" theme
For a display deeply rooted in works from the past, trappings of the modern world are everywhere. Immersive and multi-sensory, some of the galleries house speakers playing the swishing sound of silk that the gowns would have made while others allowed you to touch the walls to feel the texture of the fabrics.
"Reawakening" is an operative word for the exhibit. Working in tandem to reference the rebirth of spring and the floral patterns that come with it, "reawakening" also refers to the technology used to bring older garments to life.
The final gallery features a 1930s wedding gown worn by New York socialite Natalie Potter. Nearby, a QR code can be scanned to open a custom version of ChatGPT where attendees can "ask" Natalie questions about her dress and life and she'll answer. Using old family letters and newspaper articles, OpenAI "brought Natalie and her world to life through her gown,” Mira Murati, the chief technology officer for the company said Monday.
Other galleries had tubes emitting scents "reawakened" from the dresses through a process that identifies molecules emitted from the fabric, then reproduces them. In others, attendees could rub the wall gently and then smell it to take in perfume scents of yore.
“What this exhibition tries to do in an experimental and also I think very engaging way is kind of bring back some of this artistic integrity that’s in these objects through technological means,” Hollein told USA TODAY.
Floral motifs just in time for Spring
Appropriate for a spring show, the exhibit is centered around floral motifs and designers who took cues from the natural world. Wintour herself attended the preview in a long green coat complete with bright floral embellishments at the sleeves and the base.
Galleries are separated in large part based on the portion of the natural world from which designers drew inspiration. One room was all poppies, with John McCrae's "In Flanders Fields" read aloud from overhead speakers. Deep reds and oranges punctuated gowns from Isaac Mizrahi and Sarah Burton. Another was all about roses, with a "Beauty and the Beast" style rose encased in glass in the center and an ostentatious rose headpiece.
One room took inspiration from Alfred Hitchcock, displaying a blazer and gown with dark swallows as footage from "The Birds" played overhead. Another hallway headed to the coast, showcasing garments inspired by the oceanside and a series of shiny shell purses.
As professional and couch critics alike prepare for the evening's red carpet, all eyes will be on how designers choose to interpret "reawakening" (and whether the celebrities sporting the looks can pull it off).
veryGood! (78668)
Related
- Olympic men's basketball bracket: Results of the 5x5 tournament
- UPS to layoff nearly 12,000 employees across the globe to 'align resources for 2024'
- Takeaways from the AP’s look at the role of conspiracy theories in American politics and society
- Tennessee's fight with NCAA illustrates chaos in college athletics. Everyone is to blame
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Secret history: Even before the revolution, America was a nation of conspiracy theorists
- Tennessee, Virginia AGs suing NCAA over NIL-related recruiting rules with Vols under investigation
- Secret history: Even before the revolution, America was a nation of conspiracy theorists
- Giants, Lions fined $200K for fights in training camp joint practices
- For Chicago's new migrants, informal support groups help ease the pain and trauma.
Ranking
- USA men's volleyball mourns chance at gold after losing 5-set thriller, will go for bronze
- Venomous and adorable: The pygmy slow loris, a tiny primate, is melting hearts in Memphis
- Marvel's 'Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur' is still a stone cold groove
- Simon & Schuster marks centennial with list of 100 notable books, from ‘Catch-22' to ‘Eloise’
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Report: Baltimore Orioles set for $1.725 billion sale to David Rubenstein, Mike Arougheti
- Fulton County says cyberattack did not impact Trump election interference case
- Elmo wrote a simple tweet that revealed widespread existential dread. Now, the president has weighed in.
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Buying season tickets to go to one game? That’s the Caitlin Clark Effect
Tennessee police fatally shoot man who pointed gun, fired at officers, authorities say
Ex-Pakistan leader Imran Khan gets 10 years for revealing state secrets, in latest controversial legal move
Bet365 ordered to refund $519K to customers who it paid less than they were entitled on sports bets
Elmo takes a turn as a therapist after asking 'How is everybody doing?'
Eminem retracts threat of diss track directed toward Lions OC Ben Johnson
Live, Laugh, Lululemon: Win Over Your Valentine's Heart With These Wishlist-Worthy Gifts