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Costume Art

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Across its nineteen collecting areas, The Metropolitan Museum of Art spans more than five millennia of artistic production, encompassing diverse cultures, geographies, and epistemic traditions. Within this heterogeneity, one constant persists: the human figure—and, more precisely, the dressed body. Draped, wrapped, tailored, armored, incised, painted, ornamented, and otherwise fashioned, the body appears throughout the galleries as a site where material form converges with social meaning.

Clothing does not simply cover. It mediates identity and articulates hierarchies of class, gender, belief, belonging, and difference, shaping how bodies are perceived and understood. Fashion, in this broad cultural sense, extends beyond an ancillary role to become intrinsic to the very structure of The Met collection—a connective thread linking works across time and place.

Through collaboration with departments across the Museum, garments from the permanent collection of The Costume Institute, together with select loans, enter sustained dialogue with painting, sculpture, works on paper, and the decorative arts. With thematically resonant juxtapositions, Costume Art invites viewers to perceive familiar works as representations in which clothing structures visibility and facilitates subjectivity, rather than as autonomous forms.

The exhibition proposes a decisive reorientation. Instead of treating fashion as illustrative supplement, it positions dress as an interpretive framework for reconsidering the politics of display. By placing fashion at the conceptual center of The Met, Costume Art expands aesthetics beyond detached contemplation toward lived embodiment, with the dressed body emerging not at the margins of art history but at its generative core.

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