US football star Megan Rapinoe, meanwhile, carried a sign that read ‘In Gay We Trust’, while congresswoman Carolyn Maloney wore a dress emblazoned with the slogan ‘Votes for women’. Schitt’s Creek star Dan Levy wore a Loewe suit with two men kissing embroidered on the front. Political statements also came from Cara Delevingne, who wore a corset with ‘Peg The Patriarchy’ written across the front. In 2021, US representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wore a Brothers Veliers fishtail gown to the Gala with the message ‘Tax The Rich’ daubed, graffiti-style, across the back.
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The Met Ball guests haven't always been so light on bold political gestures, of course. In the face of these issues, however, the Gala's attendees silence appeared - at face value at least - deafening. And let's not forget the long-running reckoning around racial violence and inequity, the climate crisis and the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. There’s also the current fight for LGBTQ+ rights, with the so-called ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill in Florida which forbids teachers to speak about gender identity or sexual orientation to children under nine. The news is widely seen as the latest assault on women’s reproductive tights in the US. Images of the Met Gala’s red carpet last night shared a timeline with the news about a leaked draft of a document revealing that the Roe Vs Wade ruling - the one that protects women’s right to an abortion in the US up to 24 weeks gestation - could be overturned by the Supreme Court. It's a striking choice considering that, at the current time, the world is not in short supply of issues. But, by and large, celebrities who attended the star-studded event opted for pretty over bold, frills over statements. An exception was New York mayor Eric Adams, who wore a jacket with the words ‘End Gun Violence’ embroidered on the back. In short supply? Any explicit reference to the state of the world. See Lizzo playing the flute and Kim Kardashian in the sheer £3.6m ($4.8m) dress that Marilyn Monroe wore to serenade JFK in 1962.
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There were OTT looks (Gigi Hadid’s Matrix-worthy puffer coat, Cara Delevingne in gold body paint, Jared Leto and Alessandro Michele’s twinning) and moments.
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With its theme of 'Gilded Glamour and White Tie' - a reference to 19th century Gilded Age, and a nod to the popular TV show of the same name - there were enough corsets to satisfy the most dedicated Bridgerton fan. Over the years, the pair studied the images, attempting to decode the signs of “one hundred years of social history”, and found some recurring symbols.įor example, they suggest that posing together under an umbrella, between the 1880s and 1920s, probably signified a romantic relationship that wedding rings, bracelets and other tokens became increasingly common and reached a peak during WWII, when they were donned mainly by sailors and soldiers and that photo booths (which appeared in the USA from 1924) were significant because, as they didn’t require a photographer or a developer, they allowed a couple to take a portrait without the fear of being “caught”.In many ways, the 2022 Met Gala did not disappoint.
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The story of the collection is told by Hugh and Neal in the essay “An accidental collection”, included in their book, Loving: A Photographic History of Men in Love 1850s-1950s, published by 5 Continents Editions.
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Thanks to the pair’s formidable research and passion, today their collection amounts to over 2,800 vintage photographs spanning from roughly 1850 to 1951, shot in Australia, Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, France, Germany, Japan, Latvia, the UK and the USA.