So how does all this tie back to art? Western paintings have always placed the female breast at the centre of visual storytelling, but the connotations are usually erotic, tantalising, be it Botticelli’s ‘Birth of Venus’ or Eugène Delacroix’s ‘Liberty Leading the People’, both iconic works of art where the breast signified submission to the male gaze. It’s only in the last century that female artists have reclaimed their anatomy as their own.
The Met Gala restaged that narrative on real bodies. The breast was not viewed solely for its conditioned sensuality. Instead, like art, it provokes conversation. Contemporary artist Shilo Shiv Suleman, whose work sits at the crossroads of magical realism and social change, has long been drawn to the female form. “In my ancestral village in Kannur,” she says, “breasts were carved into temple stone for worship, painted onto chests as breastplates for Bhagwati. Women walked with brown skin wrapped in translucent white silk. Before Victorian modesty stitched morality into blouses, our ancestors saw the body as life itself—as god. Cut to 2026 and silicon moulds adorn Kardashian bodies. Nipples erect. While this moment showcases a somewhat comfort with the female form, it gives Barbie doll bosom.”
Suleman argues for a more radical remembering, for the need to decolonise our experience of the body, to see it again as sacred rather than synthetic, a temple rather than toy.
Whether that message survives beyond the red carpet is another question. Gen Z may campaign to ditch their bras, yet in television and on the big screen they’re still filtered and flagged for the male gaze. Just look at the latest season of Euphoria, where most of the characters seem fixated on ways to monetise their bodies. It’s a gendered approach to capitalism deftly hidden behind the guise of female autonomy. Ryan Murphy’s The Beauty showcased a slew of polished, perfected bodies, nipples and all.
For a more nuanced view of our breasts, though, there is Apple TV’s latest offering Margo’s Got Money Troubles. The series about a student who becomes pregnant by her English teacher and turns to OnlyFans to support her baby is messy and funny. Margo’s breasts appear in all their moods—bare, bejewelled, or dressed in cosplay, yet there’s a certain pride that the titular Margo takes in choosing this new line of work. Her approach is not shrouded in shame or abject secrecy, and, unlike in Euphoria, no one is making a fool of her.
Does that mean I’m ready to wear the Skims faux nipple top out on the streets of Mumbai? Probably not. But I can appreciate the fact that even if I chose to, at least it won’t be censored on Instagram anymore.