Just In: New Details About the Upcoming Met Exhibition, “Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty”

​​​Composite Image, 2023. Photographed by Julia Hetta. Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The exhibition—and party—of the year are just six weeks away, and today the Costume Institute has released some “teaser” content that provides details of how “Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty,” is conceptually organized. We’re also treated to some of the photographs Julia Hetta made for the soon-to-be-released catalog, as well as fashion sketches and runway imagery that provide a tantalizing glimpse as to what will be on display.

The show features more that 150 objects spanning Lagerfeld’s six-decade career (c. 1950-2019), and most pieces will be accompanied with a corresponding sketch. Artworks illustrating the designer’s many cross-cultural references—from Art Deco to Memphis, literature to film, the 18th century to robots—will also be included. Curator Andrew Bolton landed on Lagerfeld’s drawings as a way into a deeper understanding of the designer’s process, which saw ideas manifested first on paper and then collaboratively rendered in cloth. “With Karl, everything he ever designed in his life, he drew first,” Bolton noted in a recent interview.

A polyglot who spoke German, French, English, and Italian, Lagerfeld was also fluent in the gestural and physical language of lines and curves, as is evidenced by the lively drawings he made for the ateliers that translated his 2D documents into 3D garments. There will be a room dedicated to the premières d’atelier, or seamstresses, who made his pen and ink lines dance fluidly in fabric. Documentary footage captured by the French filmmaker Loïc Prigent, will further animate and extend the themes of the show.

The theoretical framework for the exhibition, which opens to the public on May 5, is derived from William Hogarth’s 1753 book The Analysis of Beauty. The artist and writer equated stillness and inactivity with straight lines, and the opposite qualities with serpentine lines. Those “lines of beauty,” form the main binary that organizes the show, with rigid lines representing Lagerfeld’s “modernist, classicist, and minimalist inclinations” and curvy lines associated with the designer’s opposing “historicist, romantic, and decorative impulses.”

The tension between the two sides creates sparks; Bolton dubs garments in which lines and curves intersect “explosions,” and they will appear like punctuation marks throughout the exhibition, which is arranged as an essay rather than a chronology. The focus of the exhibition is on the “how” (the process) and the “what” (the final garments), and Bolton is also interested in creating a taxonomy of the recurring tropes in Lagerfeld’s work. In order to consider designs for Chloé, Fendi, and Chanel, there are further subsections within the main straight/curved divide. These will examine such dualities as feminine and masculine, romantic and military, and rococo and classical, among others.

The esteemed Japanese architect Tadao Ando captured some of Lagerfeld’s “creative dynamism” in his design for the museum’s Tisch Gallery by creating what Bolton describes as a “maze,” constructed using the curves and lines that were the building blocks of Lagerfeld’s work. Like “Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty” in 2011, “A Line of Beauty” comes not long after the death of the designer. This ability to react quickly is crucial, Bolton said in a recent conversation. “When a designer has passed away, there’s a large amount of revisionism that goes into play over the years; whereas if you are able to do an exhibition relatively soon after the designer’s passing, working with the team you tap into the realness and the rawness of their feelings and their memory, which makes the show more authentic, [and] also makes the designer’s work more authentic as well.”

“Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty” runs from May 5 through July 16, 2023. It is organized by Andrew Bolton with support from Mellissa Huber, associate curator. Amanda Harlech serves as the creative consultant. The exhibition and benefit are made possible by Chanel. Major support is provided by Fendi. Additional funding is provided by Karl Lagerfeld and Condé Nast.

Coat, Fendi (Italian, founded 1925), fall/winter 2000–2001; Courtesy of Fendi.Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Sketch of Fendi coat, fall/winter 2000–2001; Courtesy of Fendi.Photo: Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fendi, fall 2000 ready-to-wearPhoto: JB Villareal / Shoot Digital for Style.com
Coat, House of Chanel (French, founded 1910), fall/winter 2014–15 Haute Couture; Courtesy of Chanel.Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Sketch of Chanel coat, fall/winter 2014–15 Haute Couture; Courtesy Patrimoine de Chanel, Paris.Photo: Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Chanel, fall 2014 couturePhoto: Dominique Charriau / Wire Image / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
“Rachmaninoff” dress, Chloé (French, founded 1952), spring/summer 1973; Courtesy of Chloé.Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Sketch of Chloé “Rachmaninoff” dress, spring/summer 1973; Courtesy of Chloé. Photo: Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Dress, Fendi (Italian, founded 1925), spring/summer 1997; Courtesy of Fendi.Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Sketch of Fendi dress, spring/summer 1997; Courtesy of Fendi.Photo: Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fendi, spring 1997 ready-to-wearPhoto: Davide Maestri / WWD / Penske Media via Getty Images / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Coat, House of Chanel (French, founded 1910), fall/winter 2017–18 Haute Couture; Courtesy of Chanel.Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Sketch of Chanel coat, fall/winter 2017–18 Haute Couture; Courtesy Patrimoine de Chanel, Paris.Photo: Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Chanel, fall  2017 couture Photo: Peter White / Getty Images / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Ensemble, Karl Lagerfeld (French, founded 1984), fall/winter 2004–5; Courtesy of Karl Lagerfeld.Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Lagerfeld Gallery, fall 2004 ready-to-wear

Photo: Marcio Madeira
Dress, House of Chanel (French, founded 1910), spring/summer 2019 Haute Couture; Courtesy of Chanel.Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Sketch of Chanel dress, spring/summer 2019 Haute Couture; Courtesy Patrimoine de Chanel, ParisPhoto: Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Chanel, spring 2019 couturePhoto: Victor Boyko / Getty Images / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Wedding dress, House of Chanel (French, founded 1910), fall/winter 2005–6 Haute Couture; Courtesy of Chanel.Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Sketch of Chanel wedding dress, spring/summer 2005–6 Haute Couture; Courtesy Patrimoine de Chanel, ParisPhoto: Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Chanel, fall 2005 couture showPhoto: Giovanni Giannoni / WWD / Penske Media via Getty Images / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Dress, Karl Lagerfeld (French, founded 1984), fall/winter 1985–6, edition 2023; Courtesy of Karl Lagerfeld.Photo: © Julia Hetta / Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art