Kendall Jenner has become an impressive vintage collector, with a closet full of impeccably preserved Alaïa and Mugler, but the 2024 Met Gala might just mark her most impressive archive fashion moment yet.

“I made a dream list of who I would ideally want to go with, and I would have died to wear something by Alexander McQueen,” Jenner tells Vogue. The model dove into his Givenchy archive to find her perfect Met look. (The late designer served as creative director of Givenchy from 1996 until 2001.) “The House of Givenchy is in a unique transition of creative directors, and the house is opening its privately protected archives for Kendall at the Met,” explains Jenner’s stylist, Dani Michelle. “We did a tonne of research, specifically on the work of the talented and remembered Alexander McQueen, and Kendall and I both fell in love with this dress. Shockingly, they had it.”

Tonight, Jenner becomes the first person to ever wear one of McQueen’s autumn/winter 1999 looks for Givenchy Haute Couture. The collection was presented on mannequins and never shown on the runway. Since its presentation, Jenner’s look was preserved in the Givenchy archives, and it will be returned to the archives tonight after Kendall has worn the piece. “It’s been sleeping for the last 25 years. It’s literally a ‘sleeping beauty’,” Jenner says. “It’s such a special moment. I feel extremely honoured that they’re allowing me to wear it.”

Since the dress has been kept in pristine condition, tailoring was forbidden. “So the big moment of truth was, does it fit me? and it literally fits me like a glove,” Jenner says. “The rest is history, and it really feels meant to be in a way.”

Kendall climbing the steps at the Met.
Photo: Jamie McCarthy via Getty Images

Kendall climbing the steps at the Met.

Photo: Jamie McCarthy via Getty Images

The vintage Givenchy look on a mannequin.
Photo: WWD via Getty Images

The vintage Givenchy look on a mannequin.

Photo: WWD via Getty Images

Constructed of nude and black tulle, the dress is covered with over 100,000 black and brass beads and sequins, which were hand-embroidered over 500 hours. Not only is it an impressive feat of labour, the waist cutouts and regal, sculptural collar and shoulders make it a true work of art. “No matter what Kendall does with her style, it has to speak to her – the look has to come alive,” Michelle says. “We saw such a story behind the dress, and the darker queen of a Sleeping Beauty story.”

Vintage was an especially inspired choice – and a massive flex on Jenner’s part – for the Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashionexhibit, which seeks to examine how we can engage with clothing we can no longer wear. As soon as Jenner learned the 2024 Met Gala theme, she saw it as a chance to dabble in her love of vintage – as well as create an opportunity to wear garments that speak to her. “The theme, to me, screamed archival,” Jenner says, adding that she also interprets it as “beauty that’s been slept on”. Plus, “the way it’s cut in the back, and the low butt – all these beautiful things feel very me.”

Tonight marks Jenner’s 10th Met Gala, and her first wearing an archival look, which she has accessorised with custom Studio Amelia shoes and Lorraine Schwartz jewellery. Over the last decade she’s delivered some truly jaw-dropping moments – from her foray into naked dressing in La Perla in 2017, to her Vegas showgirl look with her sister, Kylie, in 2019. But tonight, with McQueen’s Givenchy archive at her fingertips, might just be her most impactful Met yet.

Alexander McQueen’s original sketch, 1999
Courtesy of Givenchy

Alexander McQueen’s original sketch, 1999

Courtesy of Givenchy

Courtesy of Givenchy

Courtesy of Givenchy