
Photo: Getty Images
When Raúl Ávila first got the call to begin designing this year’s Met Gala, as he has done since 2007, the theme of “Costume Art” presented a unique challenge. How do you connect the idea of the “dressed body”—of the human form as a canvas for artistic expression through fashion—to decor?

Photographed by Poupay Jutharat
Ávila and the event design team, which includes Baz Luhrmann and the award-winning set designer Derek McLane, decided to center the decor on the concept of Northern Italian gardens. Paying reference to Renaissance design, the goal was to create a romantic atmosphere in which guests are immersed in a scene fit for a work of art, placing them—and the wearable art on their bodies—in the visual tradition of the pieces all around them. This concept complements the unveiling of the Costume Institute’s new Condé M. Nast Galleries, whose debut show features clothing and artwork from a majority of the museum’s 19 collecting areas.

Photo: Getty Images
The first decor element that guests of the gala encounter—and the one that is broadcast around the world—is, of course, the “red” carpet. But this year’s carpet isn’t red, and at first glance, it might not even look like a carpet. That’s because the carpet for the 2026 Met Gala was hand-painted to resemble a stone garden pathway, a tan design with patches of moss green, all creating the feeling that it has “been there for a long time,” says Ávila.

Photographed by Poupay Jutharat
The carpet is framed by a cloud of light purple, pink, and white wisteria, lining the ceiling and walls of the tent. It is a mix of real wisteria and “trompe l’oeil,” says Derek McLane. “It’s soft, it’s romantic, it says spring,” he adds. Focusing on one texture gives it a “simplicity of modernity, which I think is right for this year.”
As guests ascend the stairs of the carpet into the museum, posing for photos along the way, they will take their first steps into a magical garden assembled for the evening.























