Fashion’s
Faustian pact: the high cost of Jeff Bezos’s Met Gala patronage
Billionaire’s
role as honorary chair and main source of funding has led to boycotts and
criticism event has lost its cachet
Morwenna
Ferrier
Sun 3 May
2026 15.22 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2026/may/03/met-gala-jeff-bezos-art-fashion-new-york
The Met
Gala in New York is the grandest and ritziest event in the fashion calendar,
and an indicator of the growing ties between designers, celebrity and power.
But with tech billionaires now joining the cohort, this year’s party may be its
most controversial yet.
All eyes
are on the guest list – and their outfits – to launch the fashion exhibition
Costume Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute. Beyoncé,
Venus Williams and Nicole Kidman are chairing the event with Vogue’s Anna
Wintour, and tickets cost about $100,000 (£73,500). But in a plot twist worthy
of the new Devil Wears Prada film, Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos, the Met
Gala’s new honorary chairs, will be joining the 450 guests on the museum steps
on Monday.
The
billionaires’ involvement as the main source of funding for the exhibition and
the party has set tongues wagging, reviving rumours that the Amazon founder
will buy Condé Nast, the parent company of Vogue, which oversees the gala. Last
year there was speculation that Bezos would snap up the company as a wedding
gift – it is thought the couple missed the 2025 gala only because of their
starry wedding in Venice, although Sánchez Bezos appeared on Vogue’s digital
cover in a Dolce & Gabbana wedding gown.
Skipping
the event is Zohran Mamdani, breaking a decades-long tradition of New York
mayors attending the gala. Parts of New York have been papered with posters
criticising the Bezos’s involvement in the fundraiser, mounted by Everyone
Hates Elon, a British activist group, which raised £15,000 in a week and is
expected to be present on the night. “I love celebrity culture and fashion as
much as anyone, but [Bezos’s involvement] makes Vogue seem irrelevant,” a
spokesperson said. “Don’t tell me Bezos has been involved because of his
fashion sense?”
Even
before the politics, the gala dress code had become a hot topic. Titled
“fashion is art”, it takes its cue from the exhibition’s theme, which argues
that fashion and art are intertwined, “with bodies wearing clothes the common
thread”, according to Andrew Bolton, the curator of the Met’s Costume
Institute.
Split
into 13 “thematic” body types, from pregnant and ageing to disabled and
variations on nudity, the exhibition pairs about 200 sculptures and artworks
alongside 200 garments and accessories. “The focus is on bodies marginalised in
fashion, and ones that haven’t been valorised in either fashion or western
culture,” said Bolton.
Highlights
include a contorted corset by Michaela Stark paired with Niki de Saint Phalle’s
Nana and Serpent sculpture, and a Sarah Lucas work next to wearable art made
out of “Nora Batty-like stockings” by the British designer Harry Pontefract.
A late
Roman Venus Pudica sculpture is paired with a dress that uses strategically
placed human hair by the British-Turkish designer Dilara Findikoglu. A Burberry
trench belonging to the disability activist Sinéad Burke and Batsheva Hay’s Hag
jumper also feature, as do Rei Kawakubo gowns and Vivienne Westwood’s Martyr to
Love jacket, which resembles a man’s upper body.
As ever,
the link between the gala’s dress code and what materialises on the museum
steps is tangential. “I’m sure there will be some nakedness,” said Bolton. “I
also think we’ll get a lot of goddess gowns. But I do worry people might take
the theme literally and come as a painting. Or at least Andy Warhol’s
Campbell’s soup can.”
Still, he
thinks the theme has never been more essential. “A lot of the developments
fashion has made over the last few years have really eroded,” he said. “I don’t
feel as if we’re seeing as much diversity on the runway as you did [then].”
While the
theme will no doubt elicit some more literal translations, including Yves Saint
Laurent’s Mondrian-inspired dresses, Cally Blackman, an associate lecturer of
fashion history and theory at Central St Martins, hopes it will serve as a
riposte to criticism about the value of fashion.
“It is
the most powerful form of non-verbal communication that exists, yet we’re
always fighting the battle [to prove its worth],” she said. “It’s only in the
last 10 years that museums like the Met or the V&A have realised it gets
more people over their thresholds.”
Bolton,
who is preparing to reveal the Costume Institute’s new permanent home, the
Condé M Nast Galleries, agrees. “For an art museum to position fashion in the
centre of the building is symbolic,” he said. “I think people are realising not
just the aesthetic value of fashion, but the social, cultural and personal
ones.”
The gala
is one of the most-watched red carpet events of the year, typically attracting
1bn global video views on Vogue’s site alone, and is fast outgrowing its
philanthropic purpose, which is to raise funds for the New York museum.
Blackman said: “The problem with the gala is that it’s … self-defeating. It’s
not about fashion, it’s about publicity. I think a lot of the cachet has gone
because it’s funded by Jeff Bezos.”

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