05/10/2026
Open to the public today––Costume Art!
The Costume Institute’s spring 2026 exhibition explores depictions of the dressed body across The Met’s vast collection, pairing garments with artworks to reveal the inherent relationship between clothing and the body.
Plan your visit and don't miss loans from the Arms and Armor collection, including a stunning Etruscan cuirass, and a Japanese 仏胴 “Buddha” cuirass (hotoke-dō)! Displayed within the classical body section of the exhibition, these objects help demonstrate the interplay between evolving conceptions of balance, harmony, symmetry, and proportion. Artists, designers, and armorers explored how such ideals could be represented, and what those representations might mean to owners and wearers of these objects.
Congratulations to everyone who worked hard to make this amazing exhibition a reality!
Anatomical Cuirass. Etruscan, probably Vulci, late 5th–4th century BCE. Bronze, H. 20 1/2 in. (52.1 cm); W. 14 7/8 in. (37.8 cm); D. 11 in. (27.9 cm); Wt. 6 lb. 13.7 oz. (3109.9 g). Purchase, Louis V. Bell, Harris Brisbane Dick, Fletcher, and Rogers Funds and Joseph Pulitzer Bequest and Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald S. Lauder, Friends of Arms and Armor and Malcolm Hewitt Wiener Foundation Gifts, 2017 (2017.228a–d).
Miyake Design Studio. "Silicone Body," and "Plastic Body," loans courtesy Miyake Design Studio.
House of Givenchy. Dress, loan courtesy Givenchy.
Yves Saint Laurent. Chest cast and waist cast, loan courtesy Jordan Roth Collection.
Alexander McQueen. Vest, loan courtesy Alexander McQueen.
Schiaparelli. Dress, loan courtesy Patrimoine Schiaparelli, Paris.
仏胴 “Buddha” Cuirass (Hotoke-Dō). Japanese, 16th or early 17th century. Iron, silk, H. 16 3/4 in. (42.6 cm). Rogers Fund, 1904 (04.4.34).