Publishing is full of rankings, from power lists to best-dressed lists to under-40 lists. The CULT100 is different. There is just one criterion for inclusion—but it’s a high bar.

To qualify, a candidate must be actively shaping and changing our culture in real time. The people on this list represent five generations and hail from the worlds of food, publishing, art, fashion, activism, and entertainment. To put this group together, CULTURED‘s editors leveraged the full strength of our network, tapping artists, writers, and cultural leaders to tell us who they look to when they want to feel challenged, hopeful, and inspired.

Some members of the CULT100 are household names; others have been working behind the scenes to make possible the cultural encounters that stop us in our tracks. In a time of binary thinking, the creators featured in this year’s list are embracing contradiction, bouncing willfully between disciplines, and refusing to take no for an answer. They have guts, vision, and a potent cocktail of realism and optimism. None of them is shying away from the anxiety of our moment. Instead, they are thinking big, sharing generously, and embodying courage. The good news is, their work makes us all a little bit braver, too.

Alexei Hay; Styling by Keita Lovelace
Photography by Alexei Hay; Styling by Keita Lovelace

Julie Mehretu

Visual Artist

WHAT’S ONE BOOK, WORK OF ART, ALBUM, OR FILM THAT GOT YOU THROUGH AN IMPORTANT MOMENT IN YOUR LIFE?

Moby Dick got me through those sleepless nights during the early weeks of quarantine.

WHO DO YOU CALL THE MOST?

Probably my children, and they rarely answer.

WHEN YOU WERE LITTLE, WHAT WERE YOU KNOWN FOR?

Looking like a boy and wearing paper ties I decorated using watercolors, crayons, and colored pencils.

“I was surprised by the haunting glow in my new transparent paintings—their presence and how the sculptural frames made by Nairy Baghramian held them up with unanticipated agency.”

WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME YOU SURPRISED YOURSELF IN YOUR WORK?

I was surprised by the haunting glow in my new transparent paintings—their presence and how the sculptural frames made by Nairy Baghramian held them up with unanticipated agency throughout the installation at White Cube Bermondsey in London this past autumn.

NAME AN INFLUENCE OF YOURS THAT MIGHT SURPRISE PEOPLE.

Bach’s St. Matthew Passion.

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE MORE OF IN YOUR INDUSTRY? LESS OF?

More radical invention and a return to making art for artists. Less perfection and formulaic work.