Met Gala: What “Fashion IS Art” Says About Our Current Political Climate
Fashion and Politics Collide at the 2026 Met Gala
The first Monday in May has always been a surreal intersection of extreme wealth and creative fantasy. But the 2026 Met Gala, the theme “Fashion IS Art” did more than just turn the red carpet into a living gallery. It held up a mirror to a political climate increasingly defined by the chasm between those who commission the art and those whose labor builds the museum.
While the steps of the Met were a flurry of $100,000 tickets, up from last year’s $75,000, and avant-garde silhouettes, the real story wasn’t just on the carpet, it was projected onto the side of Jeff Bezos’ $80 million penthouse in NoMad.
Early Skepticism
The announcement that Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez would serve as honorary co-chairs raised eyebrows long before the first seam was stitched. In a year where the exhibition explores the “centrality of the dressed body,” critics were quick to point out the bodies missing from the conversation: the hundreds of thousands of Amazon warehouse workers.
By positioning the world’s second-richest man as a gatekeeper of “Art,” the Met inadvertently leaned into a classic historical trope: the Gilded Age industrialist using high culture to soften a controversial corporate image.
“It has been such a fun and meaningful experience,” Sánchez told Today earlier this week. But for many, the “meaning” was inseparable from the mounting labor disputes and the “piss bottle” lawsuits that have become synonymous with the Amazon delivery experience.
Projections of Reality
While the gala inside celebrated “embodied art forms,” a different kind of performance art was taking place outside Jeff Bezos’s NYC residence.
Organized by the activist group “Everyone Hates Elon“ (who clarified that their sights are set on billionaires of all stripes), guerrilla projections transformed the billionaire’s apartment building into a massive billboard for the working class.
The Affordability Crisis
The 2026 political climate is one of deep “affordability” crises—a sentiment echoed by Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who skipped the event to focus on NYC’s housing and cost-of-living issues. When we treat fashion as “Art,” we must also ask: Who is the artist, and who is the canvas?
For the guests inside, the canvas was a custom gown. For the protesters outside, the canvas was the very architecture of billionaire wealth.
The Takeaway
The 2026 Met Gala will likely be remembered as the “Billionaire Era” of the Costume Institute. It successfully proved that fashion is art, not just because of the craftsmanship of the garments, but because, like all great art, it provoked a visceral, public, and highly political reaction.
Is the Met Gala still a celebration of creativity, or has it become a $10 million shield for the ultra-wealthy? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.
