The Armor of Artifice
First, there’s the literal barrier. Consider Cardi B at the 2021 AMAs, her face obscured by a golden Schiaparelli mask. We couldn’t see her expression, her reaction, or even her eyes. She wasn’t just a person at an awards show; she was a living sculpture, a priceless object for admiration, not interaction. This kind of high-fashion armor does more than just make a statement; it creates a deliberate and beautiful distance. By hiding the most human part of herself, Cardi projected an image of pure, controlled artistry. The message is clear: you can look, you can admire, but you cannot truly connect. This isn't a rejection of the audience but a redefinition of the relationship. The star becomes a curated work of art, and we are the museum-goers,
kept at a respectful distance by the velvet rope of avant-garde design.
Performance Art Personified
Beyond a single garment, some looks turn the entire arrival into a piece of performance art. The undisputed master of this is Lady Gaga. Her 2013 AMAs entrance on a massive, human-powered white horse wasn't just a grand arrival; it was a declaration that she operates by different rules of physics and social conduct. She wasn't just attending an event; she was staging a happening *at* the event. The look—a flowing lavender gown, long blonde hair—was almost secondary to the sheer spectacle. This kind of move elevates a pop star from a musician to a cultural force. It tells the audience that their creativity isn’t confined to the recording studio. It spills out, covering everything they do and turning a simple walk from a car to a building into a mythological event. This level of theatricality is inherently untouchable. You don’t ask a goddess who just arrived on a mythical steed for a selfie.
The Embodiment of an Era
Sometimes, the untouchable quality isn’t about a single look but about how a look perfectly crystallizes an entire artistic persona. Think of Taylor Swift at the 2018 AMAs in a reflective, disco-ball-esque Balmain outfit. Emerging from her darker “Reputation” era, the look was a shield and a spotlight all at once. It was dazzling, deflecting, and impossible to ignore—much like her celebrity at that moment. The outfit wasn’t just a dress; it was the physical manifestation of her album’s themes. Similarly, Christina Aguilera’s looks during her “Dirrty” phase—the micro-miniskirts, the contrasting hair extensions, the impossibly low-rise pants—weren’t just fashion choices. They were a uniform for a new, rebellious identity that felt dangerous and excitingly out of reach for the average fan. When an artist’s look becomes synonymous with their music and message, they transcend personhood and become a living symbol. And symbols, by their nature, are untouchable.
The Fantasy We Crave
Ultimately, this sense of being untouchable isn't a bug; it's a feature. We don't tune into the AMAs to see pop stars in sensible, relatable outfits we could buy at the mall. We watch for the fantasy. We want to see people who are so creative, so bold, and so dedicated to their craft that they are willing to become living, breathing art. The surreal silhouettes, the impossible structures, and the defiant concepts are a service. They provide the glamour and escapism that is the fundamental promise of pop stardom. In a world that often feels mundane, these artists use fashion to remind us that the extraordinary is possible, even if it’s just for one night on a red carpet. Their untouchability is their gift to us, a glimpse into a world more vibrant and imaginative than our own.











