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.

Gabriela Herman
Photography by Gabriela Herman

Kamasi Washington

Musician

HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOURSELF?

As a thinker. I love to think. It sounds simple, but to me thought is one of the most amazing things. It’s the vehicle that allows us to travel through the realm of possibilities, which is the biggest space there is.

“Thinking is the vehicle that allows us to travel through the realm of possibilities, which is the biggest space there is.”

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

I know we live in a world that is dominated by money and the idea of money, but to me music is bigger than that. I wish that more artists and musicians got to create without having to think about the business. I’m not judging anyone for leveraging their art to sustain themselves, because we all have to do that. But I wish there was a little more space to create.

WHEN YOU WERE LITTLE, WHAT WERE YOU KNOWN FOR?

Before I really got serious about music as a teenager, I was known for two things: First, being kind of smart—kids would ask me for help in classes that I wasn’t even in. And second, being kind of feisty. I used to fight a lot, but I’m a hyper-peaceful person now. Maybe it’s because I’ve experienced the void of violence and what it can’t do.