
It has been dubbed fashionโs most glamorous evening of the year; the gala opening of the Metropolitan Museum of Artโs Costume Instituteโs annual exhibition. Held on the first Monday of May, the Met Gala is a glitzy spectacle that brings together stars, style visionaries, and cultural tastemakers to support the museumโs Costume Institute. This year, the theme is about Black Style, and how African Americans have impacted the world through style and fashion.

With the massive media coverage draws it could not have come at a better time. While books mentioning slavery and the civil rights movement, and anything referring to ethnic and gender diversity are removed from shelves in schools and libraries around the US, the Met gala as well as the exhibition will draw the worldโs attention to the resilience and creativity of Black individuals and how they have, through fashion, carved out spaces of pride and resistance in the face of adversity.

Image: Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, BFA.com/Zach Hilty.
The theme: โSuperfine: Tailoring Black Style โ, is based on Monica L. Millerโs 2009 bookย โSlaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black Diasporic Identityโ. Miller also serves as a guest curator for the show, together with the instituteโs curator in charge Andrew Bolton, to show the importance of style to the formation of Black identities. It shows the transformation from being enslaved and displayed as luxury items in outdated baroque outfits to self-styled individuals who have become global trendsetters.

Photo ยฉ Tyler Mitchell 2025

Freedom, or, The Escape of William and Ellen
Craft from Slavery by William Craft, 1860.
Boston Public Library, Special Collections
(RARE BKS E450.C84R 1860x).
Courtesy Internet Archive.

Rubel Collection, Gift of William Rubel, 2001
(2001.756).
Photo ยฉ The Metropolitan Museum of Art
โFashion and dress have been used in a contest of power and esthetics by Black people from the time of enslavement to today. And dandyism has often been used to manipulate the relationship between clothing, identity, and power, says Monica L. Miller.

The Metโs Superfine: Tailoring Black Style
press conference
Image: Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum
of Art, BFA.com/Zach Hilty
In a world where Afro American creatives and stylists have taken on leading roles in European fashion houses, the late Virgil Abloh as well as Pharell Williams are prime examples, it is hard to imagine a fashion world without their participation. Their bold interpretation of style resonates with anyone who likes to see fashion as revolt, even when it is just decorating a hoodie with the print of a classic painting – the sort of cheeky pop-art that makes heads of European fashion houses gasp for air.

Even pioneer Dapper Dan, famous for his early knockoffs where he printed luxury-logos on his own designs, is so punk, he deserves his icon status, though Fendi might still disagree. Like Dan says in this video made by VOGUE Magazine:
โI felt it was a Robin Hood-thing. Coz I was robbinโ and bringing it to the hoodโ.
He was sued by Fendi but later started collabs with Gucci, which is only fair as the fashion industry is well known for picking up ideas from street styles, rarely with any attribution at all.

The exhibition features garments, paintings, photographs, and objects owned by dandies and artists including Torkwase Dyson, Tanda Francis, Andrรฉ Grenard Matswa, and Tyler Mitchell, as well unknown and present-day trendsetters, dandies who have challenged the ideas of both race and gender.

The disco-queen Sylvesterโs sequined jacket, for instance, is a prime example. It was designed by Pat Campano, who also dressed the Supremes, and could just as easily have been worn by flamboyant icons like Little Richard, Prince, or todayโs Billy Porter.

DโAmore (American, born 1994) for Who
Decides War (American, founded 2015),
fall/winter 2024โ25; Courtesy Who Decides
War.
Photo ยฉ Tyler Mitchell 2025

1990) for Wales Bonner (British, founded 2014),
fall/winter 2020โ21; Courtesy Wales Bonner.
Photo ยฉ Tyler Mitchell 2025

Martinique, 1996), 2019; Courtesy Marvin
Desroc.
Photo ยฉ Tyler Mitchell 2025

1993) for Theophilio (American, founded 2016),
spring/summer 2025; Courtesy Theophilio.
Photo ยฉ Tyler Mitchell 2025

1988), spring/summer 2025; Courtesy LaQuan
Smith.
Photo ยฉ Tyler Mitchell 2025

19th century), 1986; The Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York, Alfred Z. Solomon-Janet A.
Sloane Endowment Fund, 2023 (2023.784aโc).
Photo ยฉ Tyler Mitchell 2025

and Lisi Herrebrugh (Dutch, born 1989) for
BOTTER (Dutch, founded 2017),
spring/summer 2022; Courtesy BOTTER.
Photo ยฉ Tyler Mitchell 2025

1993), spring/summer 2023; Courtesy Bianca
Saunders.
Photo ยฉ Tyler Mitchell 2025
Anyone who canโt visit the museum but still want to know more, should read Monica Millerโs book โSuperfine: Tailoring Black Styleโ which traces the complex and vibrant legacy of menswear across three centuries of Black culture: from todayโs hip-hop aesthetic and popular street trends, through its use during the Harlem Renaissance and the civil rights movement as a symbol of creative and political agency, and its surprising origins as an imposed uniform for servants and enslaved people. It will change any idea you might have had of fashion and dress as superficial.
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