
Creative Entrepreneurship Takes Centre Stage at BoF and Self-Portrait Los Angeles Cocktail
LOS ANGELES — On Wednesday, a curated assembly of Los Angeles' most influential voices in fashion, culture and creative enterprise, convened for an exclusive cocktail reception hosted by Imran Amed, The Business of Fashion founder and chief executive, and Han Chong, founder and creative director of womenswear brand Self-Portrait.
The event, hosted at The Living Room in Los Angeles, centred around the theme 'Creatives Shaping Culture'. It is the first in an ongoing series celebrating global creative entrepreneurship, the reception marked a meaningful step in strengthening the relationship between creative vision and business innovation that propels the fashion ecosystem forward.
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
From left to right: Imran Amed and Han Chong attend a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
'Creativity does not take place in silos,' shared Amed, as the evening began. 'Our cultural landscape has fashion, music, contemporary art, design and film intermingling with each other. Bringing people together from across these creative disciplines is one way of harnessing the potential of creative collisions, as well as the new ideas and possibilities that come from them.'
The evening drew together a dynamic mix of voices from across the BoF community. Designers and entrepreneurs like Shay Mitchell, Mike Amiri, Samantha Richelle, Tina Craig and Gelila Puck mingled with artists and actors like Becky G, Bella Poarch, Victoria Justice, Evan Ross and Manoj Dias, as well as cultural catalysts and creative talents like Janaya 'Future' Khan, Elaine Welteroth and Nara Aziza Smith.
'When I founded my brand, I knew I wanted this to be at the core of everything we did — the name itself, 'Self-Portrait' – was intended to reflect this idea of evolution and self-expression not only to my customers, but to the partners we work with too,' said Chong. 'Tonight is a really good moment to celebrate this through an event with a partner who shares the same ambitions to make an impact on creativity.'
When discussing Los Angeles' singular position as an intersection of fashion, entertainment, technology and art, Chong said: 'The city is an incredible tapestry of creativity and innovation. This event creates the space to celebrate a unique energy, connect with people who are influencing the landscape, and encourage the exchange of ideas that lead to new possibilities.'
Singer and actor Becky G echoed a similar sentiment: '[LA] is such a melting pot of so many different cultures. [...] Today, there is so much movement for the culture, for community, and there's a lot of connection that's happening.'
She added the importance of 'telling stories' within the creative process. 'It didn't really matter the realm in which that happened, whether it was through music, through fashion, through film and TV,' she told BoF. 'Then, cultivating that sense of community just came with time in it.'
Model Halima Aden shared a similar sentiment around sharing narratives within creative work: 'It's always [about] telling stories. I feel like that's how I connect personally. I need to hear your story to connect and it inspires me to share my own and create my own.'
However, actually 'being creative and doing something that not everyone's doing' is one of the biggest challenges facing emerging talent today, according to model-turned-content creator Nara Aziza Smith. 'It's kind of intimidating stepping out of that comfort zone a little bit and doing something different,' she added.
Aden advised that creatives 'just have to post it and hope that it connects with the right audience.' She adds: 'Don't get in the habit of, 'It needs to be perfect before I can show the world what my art is.' Just have confidence.'
And as influencer and entrepreneur Hallie Batchelder added: 'I always just say yes to everything and [...] then I always have a story to tell.'
BoF's 'Creatives Shaping Culture' event was made possible in partnership with Self Portrait. Special thanks to The Living Room for hosting this gathering.
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
From left to right: Imran Amed and Winnie Harlow attend a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Elaine Welteroth attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Nara Aziza Smith attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Jay Hines attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Courtney Eaton attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Janaya 'Future' Khan attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Delilah Belle Hamlin attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Dree Hemingway attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
From left to right: Raissa Gerona, Sami Miro, Kristen Noel Crawley and Shay Mitchell attend a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Halima Aden attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Brianne Howey attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Ryan Destiny attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Maria Bakalova attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Larsen Thompson attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Bella Poarch attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Becky G attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture', hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(Getty Images)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
Salem Mitchell attends a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
From left to right: Imran Amed, founder & CEO of The Business of Fashion, with Elaine Welteroth, Jonathan Singletary, Evan Ross and Janaya 'Future' Khan attend a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
From left to right: Han Chong, founder and creative director of Self-Portrait, and Tina Craig attend a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
DJ Kitty Ca$h at a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
From left to right: Bella Poarch and Becky G attend a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait Celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture'
DJ Acyde at a cocktail party to celebrate 'Creatives Shaping Culture' hosted by The Business of Fashion and Self-Portrait at The Living Room.
(for The Business of Fashion)
This is a sponsored feature paid for by Self-Portrait as part of a BoF partnership.
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Business of Fashion
5 days ago
- Business of Fashion
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Launchmetrics Report: As the industry looks forward, the next era of brand ambassadorship will be defined by 'ecosystem thinking' — how ambassadors engage, not just as spokespeople, but as co-creators, cultural catalysts and community conduits. It's no longer about who can post the loudest, but who can co-create the most meaningfully. The future belongs to brands that see talent as partners in cultural authorships — not just vehicles for product placement. Discover more insights in the report, from the evolving landscape of brand ambassador marketing in fashion, lifestyle and beauty, ROI metrics like MIV, Voice Echo analysis, 2024's top performers and standout case studies featuring Nara Aziza Smith, Zendaya, and Lewis Hamilton. This is a sponsored feature paid for by Launchmetrics as part of a BoF partnership.

Yahoo
5 days ago
- Yahoo
Grammy-winning jazz singer Samara Joy returns to Detroit for Wednesday riverfront concert
The most celebrated jazz singer of the last five years is returning to Detroit on Wednesday for an evening of music on the Detroit River. At just 25 years old, Samara Joy has captured the hearts — and the ears — of the music industry, with five Grammys already to her name after her 2021 self-titled debut and 2022's 'Linger Awhile' established her as the darling of the jazz world. She'll perform Wednesday, June 4, at downtown Detroit's Aretha Franklin Amphitheater. During the concert, Joy will perform songs from her third full-length album, 2024's 'Portrait.' The classy, inspired set finds the singer tackling standards such as "Day by Day," "No More Blues (Chega de Saudade)" and "You Stepped Out of a Dream," while also reaching new breakthroughs in her artistry, writing lyrics to existing melodies by legendary composers and stretching her voice in unexpected ways. It takes a highly ambitious artist to not only compose lyrics for a complicated and demanding tune like Charles Mingus' 'Reincarnation of a Lovebird' — to then attempt to sing it is a whole other mountain to climb. Joy pulls it off dynamically with a stylish, virtuoso performance that announces she's no flash in the pan, and she's only going to become greater with time. 'With 'Reincarnation,' I only wrote the words,' she said, 'and I enjoy doing that because I feel like it allows me to listen with intent and find words and a story that melds with the story already being told by the melody. It took me about a year to get the words right, and even more time to sing it right, but it also gave me an opportunity to expand my repertoire in a different way, and sing melodies that weren't necessarily written for the vocalist — to challenge myself.' One of Joy's early teachers was not just a Detroiter, but the legendary composer/pianist/educator Barry Harris, who died in 2021 at age 91. On 'Portrait,' she also penned lyrics to a melody of his, 'Now and Then (In Remembrance Of).' 'The song was composed by him,' she said, 'and I only really stopped to listen to it after he passed. I realized not only what a beautiful song it was, but it just kind of felt like listening to him in a song. It felt like I could really see his face whenever I listened, and hear him speaking, so I wanted to write lyrics dedicated to him and the inspiration that he gave me, but also dedicated to all the mentors in our lives. When we cross paths with them, our whole perspective changes, and that's what he did for a lot of people.' Joy, a Bronx native, also confided she's beginning to think about material for her next project. 'As I'm listening to music, I take note of what I like and what I'm gravitating toward naturally,' she said, 'and right now, that's (seminal jazz composer and arranger) Billy Strayhorn. I read his biography written by David Hajdu about a year ago, and I just loved it. I was listening to his music in a new way after reading that, so maybe I would like to delve into his repertoire.' Though Joy has played Detroit many times over the last several years, this will be her first time on the waterfront Aretha stage. 'I'm happy to come back,' she told the Free Press. 'I'm so excited, and the energy Detroit gives is always No. 1.' Samara Joy will perform, along with the Urban Art Orchestra, at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, June 4, at Detroit's Aretha Franklin Amphitheater, 2600 E. Atwater. Tickets start at $26.75 and can be purchased at Contact Free Press arts and culture reporter Duante Beddingfield at dbeddingfield@ This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Grammy-winning jazz singer Samara Joy returns to Detroit Wednesday


Vogue
01-06-2025
- Vogue
From the Archives: Who Was Madame X? Hamish Bowles Shares the Back Story on John Singer Sargent's Most Famous Sitter
'The Madame X Files,' by Hamish Bowles, was originally published in the January 1999 issue of Vogue. For more of the best from Vogue's archive, sign up for our Nostalgia newsletter here. John Singer Sargent's 1884 portrait of Virginie Avegno Gautreau, universally acclaimed as Madame X, is a definitive study in image-making. La Gautreau flaunts her otherworldly looks and her chosen role as that exotic ornament to society, a professional beauty. She is a sphinx without a secret, 'prophetic of all the sophisticated chic of Vogue,' as Philippe Jullian, historian of fin-de-siècle culture, noted in 1965. But who was this fascinator whose mystery remains compelling more than a century after Sargent captured it in sensual oil paints? John Singer Sargent, whose career is celebrated in a retrospective at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., from February 21 to May 31 (and then traveling to Boston), with a related show of drawings at the Corcoran Gallery of Art from February 14 through May 9, was born in Florence in 1856. His American parents led peripatetic lives and raised their children gypsy fashion, traveling restlessly across Europe. By the early 1880s, after a solid schooling in the atelier of the respected academician Carolus-Duran and at the École des Beaux-Arts, Sargent was already establishing a name for himself in Paris as both a portraitist and a painter of exotic genre scenes of Italy, Spain, France, and Morocco. It seems inevitable that he should have been bewitched by the notorious Victoire Gautreau since throughout his career, Sargent was drawn to unconventionally exotic beauties. He had already delighted in the feral charms of Rosina Ferrara, a Capri girl, and mysterious Moroccan beauties like the one imbibing incense in his Fumée d'Ambre Gris, painted in 1880. Later, he produced some of his most spirited portraits when presented with sitters like the haughty Spanish dancer Carmencita; the art dealer Asher Wertheimer's lively daughters Almina, Ena, and Betty; the madcap Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney; and Vaslav Nijinsky. He called the fabulous and extravagant beauty Rita de Acosta Lydig 'Art in its living form,' and presumably Madame Pierre Gautreau's symbolist looks inspired similar sentiments. Sargent found her 'strange, weird, fantastic, curious.' Fascinated, he determined to capture her as a sitter, and he embarked on an elaborate courtship. He began by enlisting the help of a mutual friend, Ben del Castillo, to whom he wrote, 'I have a great desire to paint her portrait and have reason to think she would allow it and is waiting for someone to propose this homage to her beauty... tell her that I am a man of prodigious talent.' Virginie Gautreau conceded. The sittings began in Paris in 1883, and that summer Sargent set off for the Gautreaus' country estate, the Château des Chesnes at Paramé in Brittany. Here, among the immemorial oaks that gave the 1708 house its name, the Gautreaus had planted clumps of pampas grasses and tropical palms in accordance with the fashionably exotic taste of Troisième République society.