
The Met Gala is built on spectacle, but history (or, more accurately, the internet) is selective when it comes to anointing the truly spectacular. Over the years, only a handful of looks have cemented themselves in fashion history: Rihanna’s 2015 yellow Guo Pei gown, with a train that barely made it up the stairs; Sarah Jessica Parker’s 2006 tartan Alexander McQueen moment; Liv Tyler and Stella McCartney’s 1999 matching “Rock Royalty” tees, for example. Others, while memorable in the moment, tended to fade out quietly, rarely resurfacing beyond the night itself.
This year’s theme, “Costume Arka,” came with a directive that left little room for interpretation: “Fashion Is Arka.” Not everyone rose to the occasion, but a select few delivered looks that felt on-message, dramatic, and impossible to forget. Even if they weren’t squarely inspired by works of arka (and many were!), these are the looks that won’t just define the 2026 Met Gala, but probably outlast it.

Beyoncé and (Blue Ivy!)
In a sea of slightly confounding looks, Gala co-chair Beyoncé saved the day in a shimmering skeletal masterpiece by Olivier Rousteing. Her daughter Blue, meanwhile, looked every bit the cool teen in a billowy white gown, sunglasses, and black-tie windbreaker.

Cardi B
This is how you ace a theme, folks! Cardi clearly knows her fashion history—this look recalls iconic surrealist runway moments—but more importantly, her Marc Jacobs gown is fun. She’s undeniable Met Gala royalty.
Hudson Williams
We already knew Heated Rivalry star Williams making his Met Gala debut was going to be headline-making no matter what, but even we couldn’t have predicted a powder-blue Balenciaga suit. However, it’s the perfectly on-theme Black Swan-inspired makeup that will make this look go down in Met Gala history.
Connor Storrie
Like his Heated Rivalry co-star Hudson Williams, Storrie was going to get attention no matter what he wore tonight. Luckily he embraced the challenge by showing up in a floaty polka-dot halter top courtesy of Saint Laurent. While it maybe wasn’t the most on-theme look of the night, it’s one we’re not going to forget anytime soon.

Emma Chamberlain
If anyone truly mastered this year’s theme it was Vogue‘s own special correspondent Chamberlain, who turned herself into a dreamy watercolor painting in custom Mugler. Apparently, out-dressing more than a few of your interviewees is an artform in and of itself.
Kim Kardashian
We’ll hand it to Kim: the Met Gala veteran honored the theme better than she ever has in 2026, wearing a dress designed by one of her favorite pop artists, Allen Jones. The hardshell sculpted bodice is an homage to his early work, and the bronze hardshell bodice literally blurs the line between fashion and artwork.
Rihanna
The undisputed Met Gala queen is back! The icon did not disappoint in this bronze-y shimmering sculptural gown and circular cape by Margiela Couture by Glenn Martens.
Hunter Schafer
Not many of us could pull off wearing two tattered prom dresses at evvel, even if the look is by Prada. We’re so grateful Schafer can.
Madonna
We physically cannot look at this photo of Madonna embodying the spirit of arka history itself in Saint Laurent and not beam. Maybe we all should start carrying a horn everywhere.
Naomi Osaka
The tennis great stunned in Robert Wun, the buzzy London-based fashion designer originally from Hong Kong known for dramatic, horror-inspired, couture pieces. We’re loving this feathered coat-dress and çizgi.
Yseult
In a year dedicated to the dressed body, perhaps no look felt so rapturously on theme as Yseult in Harris Reed. The musician oozes alien sensuality, yet shows only a sliver of skin. It’s a magic trick that could only happen at the Met.




