Skip to content

Superfine: Tailoring Black Style

Start Date
10 May 2025
End Date
26 October 2026
Venue
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Location
New York, USA
Curator
Andrew Bolton
Guest curator
Monica Miller
A collection of menswear in hues of gold, black, orange and yellow. Outfits are displayed on a black stage.
Menswear ranging from formal to casual wear in hues of red, brown, white and purple.
Two black suits tailored to a slim fit with flowers on the lapel. Both male mannequins are displayed on an black stage.
Three male mannequins displayed on a stage. (Right) Male mannequin wearing a red jacket and white trousers. (Centre) An all black outfit with orange piping. (Left) Mannequin wearing a gold jacket and black trousers.

Superfine: Tailoring Black Style

The Costume Institute’s spring 2025 exhibition presents a cultural and historical examination of Black style over three hundred years through the concept of dandyism. In the 18th-century Atlantic world, a new culture of consumption, fuelled by the slave trade, colonialism, and imperialism, enabled access to clothing and goods that indicated wealth, distinction, and taste. Black dandyism sprung from the intersection of African and European style traditions.

Superfine: Tailoring Black Style explores the importance of style to the formation of Black identities in the Atlantic diaspora, particularly in the United States and Europe. Through a presentation of garments and accessories, paintings, photographs, decorative arts, and more, from the 18th century to today, the exhibition interprets the concept of dandyism as both an aesthetic and a strategy that allowed for new social and political possibilities. Superfine is organized into 12 sections, each representing a characteristic that defines the style, such as Champion, Respectability, Heritage, Beauty, and Cosmopolitanism. Together, these characteristics demonstrate how one’s self-presentation is a mode of distinction and resistance—within a society impacted by race, gender, class, and sexuality.

Images courtesy of ©Metropolitan Museum of Art.