Karlie Kloss attended the 2026 Met Gala in a Dior haute couture gown she’d first seen on the runway four months earlier.
The supermodel was on the red carpet on May 4, wearing a Jonathan Anderson design she’d watched travel down the Dior runway back in January. On Instagram this week, Kloss laid out the whole arc herself: “I had the pleasure of seeing this dress on the runway back in January. Fast forward to the first Monday in May, I had the honor of actually wearing it.”
The gap between seeing and wearing is the real story. Kloss watched this gown exist in the world first. Then, four months later, she became the person inside it. That kind of origin story gives a Met Gala look a different kind of weight.
The dress was grounded in a specific artistic reference. Anderson drew direct inspiration from Magdalene Odundo, the British-Kenyan ceramic artist. Her burnished, hand-built vessels have been collected by major institutions on both sides of the Atlantic. Odundo’s work blends African and pre-Columbian ceramic traditions into forms that feel ancient and intuitive. She’s still actively working today.
Anderson took that sculptural vocabulary and translated it into couture. The resulting silhouette reads as deliberate in form, closer to a hand-built object than a typical couture garment. Kloss called it “a work of couture art” and said it was perfect for this year’s Met Gala theme. A model with her experience doesn’t use that language lightly. This dress earned it.
The headpiece came from Stephen Jones, the milliner who has created custom work for Dior for decades. It was made specifically for this look. Jones has a gift for completing a vision without overtaking it. At the Met Gala, accessories tend toward spectacle. That restraint matters.
Styling came together through Karla Welch in collaboration with the Dior team. Welch is known for making looks feel purposeful rather than assembled. At the Met Gala, everything is scrutinized frame by frame. That distinction shows.
Anderson’s career has moved from building Loewe into a critically celebrated brand to his current role at Dior. His design language across both houses has been consistent. He finds artists and craftspeople who operate at the boundary of function and sculpture. Then he figures out what that looks like as clothing. With Odundo as the starting point, the gown at this year’s Gala felt like a natural outcome of that thinking.
Kloss has been a Met Gala regular for years. She tends to show up with a clear point of view on the theme and a look that supports it. This season that process started in January, in a seat at the Dior couture show, watching a dress she’d eventually wear.
A gala season usually rewards scale and theatrics. A look that connects to actual art history is worth pausing on. The story Kloss told this week, spanning January to May, made it clear the choice didn’t happen by accident.
