When Anok Yai heard the Met Gala 2026 theme, her first thought was: I have to be a statue. The Sudanese-American model soon made a mood board and messaged Pierpaolo Piccioli. Scratch that—she “begged” the recently installed Balenciaga creative director to collaborate and (spoiler!) he, of course, said yes. The two decided that the look would be a strong art piece (“obviously,” she says) in line with the Fashion Is Art theme, but more than that, they wanted, she says, to “send a message.” They landed on the Black Madonna.
“In the climate that we’re living in right now, we need hope,” says Yai, speaking from the hair and makeup chair on Met Gala day. “I feel like being the Black Madonna in a Trump world is going to send that message.”
Still, Yai is apprehensive. “The Met is always stressful,” she says. “I’m excited, but the nerves are hitting me bad.” Perhaps the prosthetics are playing a part in this? Step two of the creative process, once Yai and Piccioli’s homage to the religious icon was locked, was the beauty. “When I go onto the red carpet, I don’t want to look like a human being,” says Yai, for whom hydration and facials are the key to Met night radiance. “I want to look like a walking statue—that’s why I decided on prosthetic hair.”
For a woman who is a fashion chameleon by trade—one who admits she usually “pulls up looking sexy”—this pivot towards mystique (the meaning behind the hundreds of Black Madonnas found in Catholic churches across Europe is deeper and more complex than a Met Gala fashion digest allows for) goes beyond religion. The 2026 Met Gala is, aside from the Time 100 gala—where Yai was celebrated as one of the most influential individuals of the year—the most high-profile event the 28-year-old has been papped at since she revealed her “silent battle” with a congenital defect that was, to borrow her own words, destroying her lungs. She closed out last year not only as Model of the Year at the Fashion Awards, but also undergoing robotic surgery. Terrifying doesn’t begin to cut it.
Yai’s majestic presence on the Met red carpet defies all of this. As the ambitious former bio-chem student—her discovery story is fast becoming fashion folklore—stepped up to the plate, she reminded us, once again, why she is a supermodel of her generation. As Yai put it herself: Amen to that.
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