The Met launches bag collaboration with Sprayground

August 16, 2024

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City has launched a collection with graphics-led bag brand Sprayground, reports Fashion Dive.

The 17-piece collection includes backpacks, handbags, duffles, and a tote bag “drawing inspiration from 5,000 years of art across the Met’s 19 diverse curatorial departments.” According to the collaborators, the line has limited inventory and “will never be produced again.”

Prices range from $80 to $400. The line is initially launching on the Met’s New York retail and e-commerce platforms; and select pieces remain in-store exclusives at the museum. Sprayground’s e-commerce platform began carrying items from the collaboration on Monday, August 12.

“The Met’s collaboration with Sprayground engages with the Museum’s collection across a range of cultures and time periods, calling attention to fan favorites and lesser-known works,” Josh Romm, head of Global Licensing at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, told Fashion Dive this week. “Infusing these selections with the Sprayground brand DNA results in a dynamic offering that sparks curiosity and conversation about art and design.”

Highlights from the collection include a silicone head of Medusa handbag, a tote featuring Vincent Van Gogh’s “Self Portrait with a Straw Hat” and a handbag in the shape of a hippopotamus from the museum’s Egyptian Art collection, nicknamed “William.”

A QR code embedded on each bag links consumers to information detailing its connection to the artwork that inspired its design.

“The Met seeks to collaborate with leading brands who have a passion for creativity, and Sprayground certainly delivers on that mission,” said Romm. “Over nearly three years, our teams worked together closely to bring this shared vision to life. Each design is the byproduct of thoughtful conversation and ideation.”

The collaboration came out of “a mutual respect for each other’s worlds—art and fashion,” says David Ben-David, CEO and creative director of Sprayground. He added that the pieces were designed to honor the past “while making it relevant to today’s fashion audience.”

The result, he said, helps make art a part of everyday life.

“It works since it’s a perfect fusion of art and fashion, reinterpreting timeless art in a way that resonates with today’s generation empowering our fans to have a wearable piece of art,” Ben-David said.

Research contact: @fashiondive