From designer Tory Burch to artist Lauren Halsey, these creative visionaries are the icons of the 21st century
Our essential list of the indomitable changemakers and pioneering groundbreakers who are defining the culture.
What makes a voice powerful? What makes one important? What makes one worthy of celebration or impossible to deny? These are the kinds of questions we asked ourselves in compiling this list of people, collectives, and choruses of individuals who are, in our estimation, Voices of Now. They are a diverse group of artists, writers, activists, and thinkers from across the cultural spectrum, each of them representing a perspective, a passion, a mission, and a distinct set of connections, ideas, and experiences. But it’s the way that they speak to us—and this moment—that sets them apart.
In putting together this list, we wanted to spotlight people who are not just at the vanguard of their respective fields but using their talents and platforms to shift narratives and conversations—and, in some cases, even presenting and starting new ones that need to be heard and had. It includes musicians and filmmakers, designers and creatives, activists and politicians, athletes and scientists, movers, makers, and multihyphenates. They are voices of joy and inspiration, of taste and fandom, of freedom and purpose, of equity and responsibility, of innovation and experience. They are the voices that empower us to find and use our own.
GRETA GERWIG, ACTOR, FILMMAKER & SCREENWRITER
Gerwig’s Barbie is at once a searing critique of gender relations and a jubilant celebration of female empowerment. It has also transformed the blockbuster landscape, becoming the highest-grossing film by a female director and establishing Gerwig as an industry power player.
THE SWIFTIES
Taylor Swift’s dedicated, joy-filled followers have taken fandom to new heights, traveling across the country to catch their idol’s Eras-tour performances—creating a huge economic influx within local communities in the process. It is estimated that the US leg of the tour will generate $5 billion in consumer spending. The Swifties have also curated a unique concert culture, beading friendship bracelets ahead of shows to trade with fellow fans. During Swift’s performance of “Shake It Off ” at a Seattle tour date, the Swifties’ rapturous jubilation even caused seismic activity equivalent to a 2.3-magnitude earthquake.
HONEY DIJON, DJ & PRODUCER
A legendary club DJ since the ’90s, Dijon was tapped by Beyoncé to co-produce two tracks—“Alien Superstar” and “Break My Soul”—on 2022’s Renaissance as a celebration of house music’s rich history and Black queer roots.
TRACY CHAPMAN, MUSICIAN
This July, Chapman became the first Black woman to earn a number one on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart as a solo songwriter with Luke Combs’s cover of her 1988 hit, “Fast Car,” illuminating her enduring influence and country music’s history of excluding diverse voices.
THE RESILIENT ONES
After withdrawing during the Summer Olympics in 2021 in order to focus on her mental health, gymnast Simone Biles took home the all-around title at her first competition back this summer. In August, sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson, who in 2021 qualified for the Summer Olympics but was suspended from Team USA due to cannabis use, won the 100-meter dash at the World Athletics Championships.
PHOEBE PHILO, DESIGNER
Perhaps no designer has had a more apparent influence over fashion’s new obsession with understatement and quality than Phoebe Philo, whose storied decade-long tenure at Celine, which began in 2008, reinvented the way women wanted to dress. By creating sharply cut, wearable pieces that always retained echoes of her own singular style, Philo created a new blueprint for luxury that was highly personal and stood apart from the male gaze. Philo stepped away from Celine in 2018, but her work during her time there continues to fuel a cultish devotion, inspiring scores of dedicated Instagram accounts and even a crowded archive sale last fall in Paris. And while she has remained quiet in the intervening years, this fall is set to mark her glorious return with the long-awaited launch of her eponymous label.
LAILA GOHAR, ARTIST
Using food as her predominant (often edible) medium, Gohar creates surreal tablescapes for museums, galleries, and fashion events. She describes Gohar World, her line of whimsical tableware, as “dreamy and sophisticated without taking itself too seriously".
KWAME ONWUACHI, CHEF & RESTAURATEUR
The James Beard Award–winning Onwuachi’s new Manhattan restaurant, Tatiana, spotlights the Caribbean, African, and South American flavours of his heritage. “I want to continue to give life to traditions that were passed down to me,” he says.
LAUREN SANTO DOMINGO, ENTREPRENEUR
As artistic director of Tiffany & Co.’s Home collection, Moda Operandi co-founder, Santo Domingo is bringing her impeccable taste to one of the house’s most renowned categories, which includes tableware, silver, and crystal.
AMERICAN FASHION’S NEW POWER GENERATION
America’s robust new wave of star designers has positioned the industry as a leader in responsibility, inclusivity, and innovation. Among them, Jerry Lorenzo, with the radically (and exquisitely) reinvented tailoring of his label Fear of God; Emily Adams Bode Aujla, who has put an emphasis on craft and material with Bode; Raul Lopez of Luar, a finalist for the 2023 LVMH Prize; Peter Do, who helms his own brand and was appointed the creative director of Helmut Lang in May; and Christopher John Rogers, who creates vibrant sportswear and evening looks.
THE STORYTELLERS RESHAPING HOLLYWOOD
Stories about Asian identity have often been sidelined in Hollywood, but a cadre of writers, filmmakers, and showrunners has now thrust them to the center. There’s Celine Song’s powerful drama Past Lives; Adele Lim’s raunchy comedy Joy Ride (co-written by Cherry Chevapravatdumrong and Teresa Hsiao); Kelvin Yu’s fantastical Disney+ series American Born Chinese; and the too-real-to-handle Netflix series Beef, created by Lee Sung Jin and executive-produced by stars Ali Wong and Steven Yeun. Next, an adaptation of Michelle Zauner’s Crying in H Mart, directed by The White Lotus’s Will Sharpe. “I’m excited that our stories are all over the damn place,” says Lim.
YORGOS LANTHIMOS, FILMMAKER
The fantasy film Poor Things, out in December, is a highly anticipated showcase of The Favourite director Lanthimos’s unconventional, occasionally surrealist approach to cinema, cementing him as one of today’s most visionary auteurs.
SZA, MUSICIAN
Solána Imani Rowe, who performs as SZA, is an artist in control of her craft. The genre-spanning musician has rejected being labeled as simply an R&B artist, and her lyricism is unmatched for its vulnerability and writerly style.
DREW BARRYMORE, HOST & PRODUCER
In a glorious second act (or perhaps her third or fourth), Barrymore launched The Drew Barrymore Show in the fall of 2020—and completely upended the traditional daytime talk show in the process, with offbeat segments, a parade of celebrity friends who join her, and most notably her own frankness, warmth and vulnerability.
LILY GLADSTONE, ACTOR
In an important moment for Indigenous representation in film, Gladstone—of Blackfeet and Nimiipuu heritage—stars in Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, based on David Grann’s non-fiction book about murder and injustice in an Osage community.
RAMY YOUSSEF, ACTOR & SHOWRUNNER
Through his semi-autobiographical comedy drama series, Ramy, and additional projects he’s written and produced, Youssef has introduced nuanced, humanistic portrayals of American Muslims to mainstream television.
TORY BURCH, DESIGNER & PHILANTHROPIST
Burch has always been focused on empowering women—with the clothes they wear and in their lives. Outside of running her own brand, she heads up the Tory Burch Foundation, which she founded in 2009 with the goal of supporting female entrepreneurs by providing access to funding, fellowships, and financial education.
MACKENZIE SCOTT AND MELINDA FRENCH GATES, PHILANTHROPISTS
In the wake of their respective divorces from Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates, Scott and French Gates led the charge on a radical, more humble approach to philanthropy, quietly donating billions of dollars with a conspicuous lack of fanfare to organisations focused on areas such as early-childhood education and development as well as those dedicated to advancing gender equality in tech, education, and politics.
AURORA JAMES, DESIGNER & ACTIVIST
In 2020, James, the designer and founder of fashion brand Brother Vellies, launched the Fifteen Percent Pledge, which encourages stores to pledge a portion of their purchasing power to Black-owned businesses. This year, she co-founded the Friends and Family Collective, a VC fund focusing on providing capital to Black founders.
MICHAEL KORS, DESIGNER & PHILANTHROPIST
Created in partnership with the United Nations World Food Programme, Kors’s global campaign against food insecurity, Watch Hunger Stop, celebrates its 10th anniversary this month. Raising money through the sale of limited-edition Michael Kors–branded capsule collections and donations, the campaign has donated more than 30 million meals to the WFP’s school meals programme, providing nutritious food to children in underserved regions. “It’s a reason to celebrate and a challenge to do more,” Kors says of the campaign’s impact.
KELLY SAWYER PATRICOF AND NORAH WEINSTEIN, PHILANTHROPISTS
Through the nonprofit Baby2Baby, co-founders Sawyer Patricof and Weinstein have provided more than 300 million essential items to kids in need across America since 2011, serving shelters, hospitals, schools, and those displaced by climate disasters.
BREA BAKER, ACTIVIST & WRITER
Baker’s book, Rooted: The American Legacy of Land Theft & the Modern Movement for Black Land Ownership, makes the case for land reparations.
THE WNBA’S OUTSPOKEN SUPERSTARS
The women of the WNBA have consistently banded together to lead displays of collective activism addressing racism, policing, gender pay equity, and LGBTQ+, voting, and reproductive rights—and fans have responded, turning out to games in record numbers. They also support one another: To protest the Russian detainment of their Phoenix Mercury teammate Brittney Griner in 2022, a group that included Sophie Cunningham and Brianna Turner held a rally on their home court.
ZOOEY ZEPHYR, MONTANA STATE REPRESENTATIVE
In April, Zephyr, the first openly trans representative in Montana’s state legislature, chided her Republican colleagues for supporting a bill banning gender-affirming care. In response, they voted to ban her from the House chamber for the rest of the 2023 session.
THE VOICES OF RESPONSIBILITY IN AI
Computer scientists Yejin Choi and Joy Buolamwini are each working to eradicate racial and gender bias within AI. Choi has developed models that detect biases in language, while Buolamwini is the founder of the Algorithmic Justice League, a nonprofit that advocates for equitable technology. Buolamwini’s debut book, Unmasking AI, is out this month.
DAN COLEN, ARTIST & FOOD ACTIVIST
In 2011, Colen, a celebrated New York painter and sculptor, established Sky High Farm, a non-profit in upstate New York that increases access to fresh, local food. “Everyone deserves to eat nutritious food,” says Colen. Since opening, it has donated more than 100,000 pounds of vegetables and 65,000 pounds of animal protein to food-access programmes.
CLIMATE ACTIVISM’S NEW GUARD
Today’s most impactful environmentalists are coming at the climate crisis from all angles. Fisheries biologist Daniel Pauly and bio-economist Rashid Sumaila are the recipients of the 2023 Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement for their research and reports on the dangers of overfishing. As the founder of non-profit Coral Gardeners, Titouan Bernicot is also working to reform ocean conservation by growing and planting resilient corals to revive reef ecosystems. Back on land, a group of youth environmentalists called the Climate Kids won a landmark case in August, suing the state of Montana on the grounds that its continued investment in fossil fuels violates an article in the state constitution that guarantees its citizens the right to a “clean and healthful environment.” And as the host of Meta’s Climate Talks podcast, journalist Sophia Li makes discussions surrounding climate justice and sustainability more accessible.
LAUREN HALSEY, ARTIST
Halsey’s sculptural artworks and site-specific projects often incorporate imagery and ideas drawn from South Central Los Angeles. During the pandemic, she established a center, Summaeverythang, to help provide food and support to members of the community. On view at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art through October 22, her installation eastside of South Central Los Angeles hieroglyph prototype architecture (I) is a love letter to her neighborhood. Designed for interaction with museum visitors, it features a 22-foot-tall cubelike structure inscribed with hieroglyphic-inspired tags and imagery representing her L.A. community, surrounded by four columns and four sphinxes.
FRIDA ESCOBEDO, ARCHITECT
In 2018, the Mexico City native became the youngest-ever designer of the annual Serpentine Pavilion in London. In 2022, she was selected to reimagine the Oscar L. Tang and H.M. Agnes Hsu-Tang Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, becoming the first woman to design a wing for the institution.
MAYA LIN, DESIGNER, ARTIST & ARCHITECT
The renowned designer of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., which she conceptualized as a senior at Yale University, Lin creates works that explore our relationship with the natural world; they commune with landscapes rather than dominate them.
DARE TURNER, MEG ONLI, AND ASHLEY JAMES, CURATORS
Museums nationwide are reevaluating the kinds of art they show and communities they serve, and that includes three of New York’s preeminent institutions. This spring, Turner (left) was named the first full-time curator of Indigenous art at the Brooklyn Museum. Onli (center) has focused on elevating the voices of overlooked artists and was recently named curator at large at the Whitney Museum of American Art and cocurator of the 2024 Whitney Biennial; and James (right), of the Guggenheim, organised the museum’s new show “Going Dark: The Contemporary Figure at the Edge of Visibility,” which explores what it means to be seen, not seen, or erased.
DOLLY PARTON, SINGER, SONGWRITER & PHILANTHROPIST
Throughout her legendary career, Parton has donated millions of dollars to organisations addressing everything from HIV/AIDS and animal rescue to pediatric cancer and the climate crisis, along with founding her own nonprofit, the Dollywood Foundation, which is focused on increasing childhood literacy. This month, Parton is set to release Behind the Seams: My Life in Rhinestones, a book chronicling the evolution of her iconic style, followed by her first rock album, Rockstar, in November.
LOIS LOWRY, AUTHOR
This year marks the 30th anniversary of Lowry’s seminal young-adult dystopian novel The Giver, which has topped banned-books lists since its publication for its depiction of a society that, while free from war, pain, and poverty, is also void of colour, joy, individualism, and love. “The current victims of book banning, this generation of kids, will be the next generation of voters,” says Lowry.
THE LITERARY DUO
Farrar, Straus and Giroux editor Jackson Howard (left) is helping to center more queer stories and voices in publishing, while Jonathan Escoffery, whom Howard has edited, is the author of the 2023 Booker-Prize-long-listed story collection If I Survive You, which examines race and identity through the eyes of a third-culture kid.
THE BLACK MATERNAL HEALTH CAUCUS
Formed in 2019 by congresswomen Alma Adams and Lauren Underwood, the Black Maternal Health Caucus seeks to advance policy solutions to improve maternal-health outcomes for Black women. This year, they introduced the Momnibus Act, featuring 13 bills that would address every driver of maternal mortality, morbidity, and disparities. “I won’t stop fighting to confront the structural racism in health care,” says congresswoman and caucus member Ayanna Pressley.
BRANDEN JACOBSJENKINS, PLAYWRIGHT
Two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist Jacobs-Jenkins is transforming the historically white American theatre landscape through plays such as Gloria and Everybody, which address topics like race, class, and identity. His 2013 drama, Appropriate, which is set during an estate closing that exposes a contentious family history, is debuting on Broadway in November.
Compiled by Nojan Aminosharei, Stephen Mooallem and Fiona Murray.
This piece originally appeared in the October 2023 issue of Harper's Bazaar US