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Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala 2024 with her flat stomach!+ Photo

Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala: Jennie Kim is taking the 2024 Met Gala by storm.

The Blackpink member made a dazzling entrance on the steps of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. Nodding to this year’s “Garden of Time” dress code, the singer went with a unique interpretation by wearing a fluid cobalt-blue minidress.

Stay with this part of celebrities from the series of entertainment in Eternal Pen magazine.

Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala

Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala1
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The custom-made Alaïa piece featured an intricately draped hemline, an asymmetrical abdominal cutout, and a one-sleeve shoulder detail that extended into a floor-length train. For some added oomph, she accessorized the look with a gold belly chain and pearl drop earrings.

Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala

Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala2
image source: GETTY IMAGES
Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala3
image source: GETTY IMAGES
Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala4
image source: GETTY IMAGES

Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala

Tonight marks Jennie’s second appearance at the Met Gala; she first attended last year. At the time, she wore a vintage Chanel dress plucked from the fashion house’s Fall/Winter 1990 collection: a strapless white minidress with a scalloped neckline and a pleated hem. Coordinating with a black ribbon tied around the bustier, she finished off the look with black gloves, opaque black tights, and black platform heels.
This year’s dress code is “The Garden of Time,” a concept inspired by J.G. Ballard’s 1962 short story of the same name. In essence, the theme examines the intrinsic connection between time and natural beauty—leaving the door wide open for attendees to interpret the dress code as they please.

Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala

Jennie Blackpink at the Met Gala5
image source: GETTY IMAGES

“The Garden of Time” also complements the Costume Institute’s spring exhibition, “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” which will include about “250 objects spanning four centuries” from the institute’s vast collection, all of them “visually united by iconography related to nature, which will serve as a metaphor for the fragility and ephemerality of fashion,” according to a press release. The exhibition will feature a number of modern technologies in its display, too, “from cutting-edge tools, artificial intelligence, and computer-generated imagery to traditional formats of x-rays, video animation, light projection, and soundscapes.”

 

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