Introducing BAZAAR’s 2022 Icons

A new generation of artists, athletes, and activists is redefining what it means to make an impact.

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2022 Icons

JOHN EDMONDS

2022 Icons

JOHN EDMONDS

2022 Icons

JOHN EDMONDS

2022 Icons

JOHN EDMONDS

 

The term icon is by now beyond iconic. It’s one of those words that’s tossed around so regularly that it’s almost lost its meaning—which is the opposite of what an icon is supposed to be. Icons are supposed to stand for something. Icons are supposed to be the embodiment of ideas, aspirations, and values. Icons are supposed to be guiding lights.

This cover portfolio explores what it means to be an icon in the making. All of the subjects are age 30 or under. It’s a demographic of people whose lives have been shaped by some very particular forces. If you’re 30 today, then you were born in the early ’90s, when the internet was nascent. You’re old enough to have witnessed 9/11 (and probably even watched it on TV), but you were not old enough to have been able to fully process it. When you were in your mid-teens, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and a financial crisis were upending the world. You remember your early 20s well because they were captured (and filtered) on Instagram. And then a pandemic, climate collapse, movements for social justice, TikTok, vibes

That’s why people like the ones below, who’ve embraced who they are and are eager to push the world forward, are so important. Icons today know how to lead but also make space for others to do the same. They’re driven to succeed, but they also invite others to share in their success. They’re kicking doors open but also making sure that everyone has an opportunity to walk through them. To be an icon in 2022 is to let go of the old definitions of what it means to be an icon and invent your own.

These artists, athletes, musicians, actors, writers, and activists are not only charting a path forward, they’re also making space for others by bringing new ideas, perspectives, and experiences to the table with a generosity, hopefulness, and vision that’s both inspiring and inspired. Read on to meet all of Harper’s Bazaar’s Icons for 2022.

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JOHN EDMONDS

 

The people I think of as icons weren’t icons just because of what they accomplished or added to humanity but for the way they lived their lives.

Tomi Adeyemi, Writer & Storyteller, 29

Alice Coltrane was a Black jazz musician who really represents the sort of life that I would like to live, where my work and my personal values are aligned.

Asha Grant, Owner of the Salt Eaters Bookshop, 29

 

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