FKA Twigs
FKA twigs (born Tahliah Debrett Barnett; 16 January 1988) is an English singer, songwriter, record producer, dancer, and actress.[1][2] Her music features experimental production blending electronic, R&B, trip hop, and avant-garde elements, delivered through a soprano vocal range and often paired with multimedia performances incorporating dance and visual art.[3][4] After working as a backup dancer for artists including Kylie Minogue and Ed Sheeran, she debuted musically with the EP EP1 in 2012, followed by her breakthrough studio album LP1 in 2014, which peaked at number 16 on the UK Albums Chart and received a Mercury Prize nomination.[5][6] Subsequent works include the albums Magdalene (2019) and Eusexua (2025)—the latter marking her highest UK chart entry at number three—as well as the 2022 mixtape CAPRISONGS.[7][5] Twigs has earned recognition such as two UK Music Video Awards, a Grammy nomination for Best Music Video, and the NME Godlike Genius Award, for which she holds the record as the youngest recipient; she has also appeared in films like The Crow (2024).[8][9][10]Early Life
Family Background and Childhood
Tahliah Debrett Barnett, professionally known as FKA Twigs, was born on 16 January 1988 in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, as the only child of a Jamaican father, who worked as a musician, and an English mother of Spanish descent, who had been a salsa dancer.[11][12][13] Barnett was raised primarily by her single mother, who originated from Birmingham, in the rural Cotswolds region near Cheltenham, alongside a stepfather of Bajan descent; she did not meet her biological father until age 18.[13][14][15][11] As one of the few mixed-race individuals in her predominantly white local community, Barnett recalled being instilled with a family-driven mentality to excel academically and artistically in order to distinguish herself from peers.[16][14] She attended private school in Cheltenham on a scholarship, describing aspects of her upbringing as evoking a sense of "magical childhood" amid the area's pastoral setting.[17][15]Education and Initial Training in Dance
Barnett commenced her formal dance training in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, where she resided during childhood, beginning with ballet and jazz classes at the age of eight after her mother's initial reluctance subsided.[18] Her early regimen also encompassed modern and tap dance, shaped by the limited pre-internet resources available in the provincial setting.[17] She attended St Edward's School, a private co-educational Catholic institution in nearby Charlton Kings, on scholarship, participating in school productions that involved performance elements aligned with her burgeoning artistic interests.[19] At age 17 in 2005, Barnett relocated to south London to pursue professional dance training, enrolling at the Brit School, a performing arts institution known for nurturing talents like Adele and Amy Winehouse.[20] However, she discontinued the program after five or six weeks, determining that a conventional dance career no longer appealed to her.[21] She subsequently transferred to Croydon College in south London for further education, marking a pivot away from structured dance schooling toward self-directed artistic exploration.[22] This brief formal phase underscored her foundational technique in ballet and contemporary forms, which later informed her backup dancing roles, though she has reflected that her innate physicality and improvised movement predated institutional instruction.[23]Career
Backup Dancing and Early Performances (2007–2011)
Barnett relocated to London at age 17 in 2005 and began pursuing professional dance opportunities, adopting the moniker "Twigs" from the cracking sound of her joints during warm-ups.[18] By 2007, she had established herself as a backup dancer, appearing in music videos for artists including Kylie Minogue, Taio Cruz, and Plan B, whose collaborative style she later praised for its hands-on direction starting at 10 a.m. shoots.[24] In 2010, Barnett danced in Jessie J's music video for "Do It Like a Dude," followed by an appearance in the 2011 video for "Price Tag."[25] That same year, she featured as a backup dancer in the two-minute BBC comedy sketch "Beyoncé Wants Groceries," portraying a performer in a supermarket setting alongside comedian London Hughes.[26] Additional video credits from this era included work with Ed Sheeran, Dionne Bromfield, and Wretch 32, reflecting her involvement in the UK pop and urban scenes.[27] Around 2010, at age 22, Barnett supplemented her performing with teaching contemporary dance classes at a London youth center, as captured in unearthed footage demonstrating her instructional style.[28] These early roles honed her movement vocabulary, which she later reflected on in her music—such as the song "Video Girl"—as experiences in high-production environments that contrasted with her emerging artistic autonomy, though she expressed mixed sentiments about the period's demands.[29]Emergence as Solo Artist (2012–2013)
In 2012, Tahliah Debrett Barnett, performing as Twigs, transitioned from backup dancing to prioritizing her own music production and releases, self-releasing her debut extended play EP1 independently on December 4 via limited vinyl and digital download on Bandcamp.[30][31] The four-track EP, produced primarily by herself alongside collaborators like Paul White and Ghosting Season, showcased sparse electronic beats, layered vocals, and themes of intimacy and vulnerability, marking her initial foray into art pop and experimental R&B.[32] Accompanying music videos for each track, including "Hide" directed by Barnett herself, circulated online and contributed to early buzz among niche audiences.[33] To avoid conflict with a U.S.-based duo also named Twigs, Barnett prefixed her stage name with FKA (formerly known as) ahead of wider promotion.[34] She signed with the British independent label Young Turks (later rebranded Young), which reissued EP1 in expanded formats and handled subsequent output.[35] This partnership facilitated her growing visibility, with EP1 receiving reappraisal for its innovative sound design upon re-release. On September 17, 2013, Young Turks issued EP2, featuring four tracks co-produced with Arca (Alejandro Ghersi), emphasizing glitchy percussion, ASMR-influenced whispers, and erotic undertones in songs like "How's That" and "Papi Pacify."[36][37] The EP's lead promotional single "Water Me," released earlier that summer with a self-directed video depicting contortionist dance, amplified her reputation for blending performance art with avant-garde electronica.[38] These releases established Barnett as an emerging solo artist, drawing acclaim from outlets like Pitchfork for her boundary-pushing aesthetics prior to her full-length debut.[39]Breakthrough and Debut Album (2014–2015)
FKA twigs announced her debut studio album, LP1, on June 9, 2014, with a release scheduled for August 12 via Young Turks, following her earlier extended plays EP1 and EP2.[40][39] The album comprised ten original tracks, excluding prior releases, and featured production led by twigs alongside contributors such as Arca and Devonté Hynes of Blood Orange.[41][42] Upon its release, LP1 garnered critical praise for its fusion of electronic, R&B, and avant-garde elements, with reviewers highlighting twigs' vocal vulnerability and intricate arrangements.[43] The album achieved commercial success, entering the UK Albums Chart at number 16 and the US Billboard 200 at number 30, marking twigs' first entry on major album rankings.[44] It earned a nomination for the 2014 Mercury Prize, recognizing its artistic innovation among British and Irish recordings, and received a Grammy nomination for Best Recording Package in 2015.[45] Singles such as "Two Weeks," accompanied by a self-directed video emphasizing twigs' dance background, contributed to heightened visibility, blending sensual choreography with thematic explorations of desire and power dynamics.[46] In support of LP1, twigs performed at the Pitchfork Music Festival on July 19, 2014, delivering sets that showcased tracks like "Two Weeks" and integrated her signature physicality in live renditions.[47] She followed with a North American headlining tour in November 2014, including dates at The Warfield in San Francisco on November 20 and The Showbox in Seattle on November 18, where performances emphasized elaborate staging and emotional intensity.[48] A December 2014 live session for KEXP further amplified her reach, featuring acoustic reinterpretations of album cuts like "Lights On" and "Hide," solidifying LP1 as the catalyst for her transition from underground acclaim to broader industry breakthrough.[49][50]Extended Plays and Visual Projects (2015–2017)
In August 2015, FKA twigs surprise-released her third extended play, M3LL155X (pronounced "Melissa"), through Young Turks.[51] The five-track EP followed her 2014 debut album LP1 and featured the previously issued singles "Figure 8" and "Glass & Patron" alongside three new songs: "I'm Your Doll", "In Time", and "Mothercreep".[52] Recorded amid her touring schedule, the project emphasized experimental electronic production, fragmented R&B structures, and themes of desire, vulnerability, and bodily transformation, with twigs handling much of the writing, production, and vocal layering.[53] The EP's release coincided with a self-directed 16-minute short film that integrated audio-visual elements for four tracks ("Figure 8", "I'm Your Doll", "In Time", and "Glass & Patron"), blending surreal choreography, voguing influences, and prosthetic pregnancy imagery to evoke a narrative of conception, pain, and liberation.[54][55] Described by twigs as an "aggressive statement" on birthing creativity from emotional turmoil, the film's Lynchian aesthetics—marked by distorted visuals, ritualistic dance sequences, and raw physicality—positioned it as a holistic extension of the music rather than mere promotional clips.[56] Initially available digitally, M3LL155X later saw vinyl and physical editions, receiving critical praise for its bold fusion of sound and image that advanced twigs' interdisciplinary approach.[57] During 2016 and 2017, twigs focused on live performances and tour visuals extending M3LL155X's motifs, including choreographed sets that incorporated the EP's dancers and thematic elements like exaggerated bodily forms, though no additional standalone extended plays emerged in this period.[53] These efforts underscored her shift toward multimedia experimentation, prioritizing immersive experiences over traditional album cycles, with the M3LL155X project marking a pivot to self-directed visual storytelling that influenced subsequent works.[54]Magdalene Era and Personal Interruptions (2018–2020)
In early 2018, FKA Twigs underwent laparoscopic surgery to remove six fibroid tumors from her uterus, an experience she described as severely impacting her confidence and leaving her in a vulnerable state.[58][59] This health setback, which occurred during a four-year hiatus from major releases following her 2014 debut album LP1, informed the thematic core of her second studio album Magdalene, exploring motifs of physical pain, emotional recovery, and feminine resilience akin to the biblical figure of Mary Magdalene.[60] Production began around this period, spanning three years across London, New York, and Los Angeles, with Twigs serving as executive producer alongside key collaborators including Nicolas Jaar as co-producer, and contributions from Skrillex, Jack Antonoff, Oneohtrix Point Never, and Cashmere Cat.[61][62] Twigs's personal life further disrupted progress in late 2018 when she began a relationship with actor Shia LaBeouf after meeting on the set of his film Honey Boy that summer; the pair dated for approximately nine months, becoming engaged in February 2019 before separating in May 2019 amid reported conflicts.[63][64] Twigs later attributed an "extreme change" in her personality and delays in Magdalene's completion to the relationship's toll, which postponed the album's release multiple times from an initial 2018 target and required rescheduling of associated tour plans.[65] Despite these interruptions, she credited the creative process with restoring hope amid relational difficulties, culminating in singles like "Cellophane" (April 2019) and "Holy Terrain" featuring Future (September 2019).[66] Magdalene was released on November 8, 2019, via Young Turks, comprising ten tracks that blended art pop, alternative R&B, and electronic elements with Twigs's layered vocals and experimental production.[61] The album received widespread critical acclaim for its introspective depth and sonic innovation, though commercial performance was modest, debuting at number 72 on the UK Albums Chart and number 82 on the US Billboard 200.[67] Supporting the release, Twigs embarked on the Magdalene Tour, announced in September 2019 with initial North American dates including Los Angeles, Chicago, Toronto, and Brooklyn, followed by European legs; performances featured elaborate choreography, aerial elements, and live instrumentation, though the tour's scope was limited by prior personal delays.[68] Into 2020, ongoing recovery from the fibroid surgery and relationship fallout manifested as post-traumatic stress disorder, which Twigs publicly discussed as a lingering effect of the prior year.[64] The global COVID-19 pandemic further halted live activities, preventing expansion of touring efforts and shifting focus inward, marking a transitional phase before subsequent projects.[69]Mixtape and Recovery Phase (2021–2023)
In the aftermath of filing a lawsuit against former partner Shia LaBeouf in December 2020 alleging physical and emotional abuse, FKA Twigs focused on personal healing and creative output.[70] The ongoing legal proceedings, which remained unresolved through 2023, coincided with her efforts to reclaim autonomy through music and collaborations.[71] On January 26, 2021, Twigs released the single "Don't Judge Me," a collaboration with British rapper Headie One and producer Fred again.., accompanied by a co-directed music video featuring dance elements inspired by her recovery process.[4] In July 2021, she directed the music video for Koreless's single "White Picket Fence," marking her continued involvement in visual projects amid personal challenges. These works reflected an initial shift toward lighter, collaborative expressions following the introspective tone of her prior album Magdalene. Twigs announced her debut mixtape CAPRISONGS on January 6, 2022, describing it in an Instagram post as "my journey back to myself" after periods of adversity, with a release date of January 14 via Young and Atlantic Records.[72] The 17-track project featured guest appearances from artists including The Weeknd on "tears in the club," Shygirl, Arca, and Pa Salieu, blending electronic, R&B, and dancehall influences with interludes of personal voice notes capturing moments of joy and introspection.[73] Critics noted its role in documenting Twigs's healing, emphasizing themes of self-discovery and communal support as a counterpoint to earlier trauma narratives.[74] Following the mixtape's release, Twigs incorporated CAPRISONGS material into select performances, including fashion week events that highlighted her interdisciplinary approach. In 2023, she debuted a new track, "Unearth Her," during a collaborative performance with Koreless at Valentino's Women's Wear Spring/Summer 2024 show in Paris on October 1, signaling ongoing evolution in her recovery through live experimentation. This phase underscored a transition from isolation to outward-facing creativity, with the mixtape serving as a pivotal artifact of resilience.[75]Eusexua and Contemporary Output (2024–Present)
In September 2024, FKA twigs released the lead single "Eusexua", marking her return to music following the 2021 mixtape Caprisongs.[76] The track, produced under Young Recordings Limited and licensed to Atlantic Records, previews a shift toward electronic and club-influenced sounds.[77] Her third studio album, Eusexua, followed on January 24, 2025, via Young and Atlantic Records, representing her first full-length project since Magdalene in 2019.[78] The album integrates techno and pop elements, described by Pitchfork as a "masterful pop-star moment" that incorporates club music into twigs' established sensual and supernatural aesthetic.[78] Reviews noted its danceable yet non-traditional club structure, blending highs reminiscent of nightlife with twigs' experimental production.[79] Subsequent singles from the era include "Perfectly", for which twigs released a music video on July 16, 2025.[80] In August 2025, she announced Eusexua Afterglow, initially conceived as a deluxe edition but expanded into a standalone album scheduled for November 14, 2025, via Young Records; the lead single "Cheap Hotel" was teased earlier that month.[81] twigs previewed the project during a performance at the Lowlands festival, signaling continued evolution in her electronic output.[82] Parallel to her musical releases, twigs expanded into visual and performance art. On September 13, 2024, she unveiled The Eleven, a durational artwork exhibition at Sotheby's London, running through September 26, which draws on themes of self-discipline and fine arts integrated into her multimedia practice.[83] That same month, she collaborated with On for "The Body Is Art" at London Fashion Week on September 16, a live performance exploring strength, fragility, and reimagined movement with a ensemble of movers.[84] These works align with twigs' interdisciplinary approach, extending her 2024–2025 output beyond recorded music into immersive installations and stage concepts.[85] Looking ahead, twigs is set to appear in the horror film The Carpenter's Son by late 2025, alongside her ongoing musical commitments, reflecting a multifaceted phase post-legal settlements and personal recovery.[86]Artistic Approach
Musical Style and Production Techniques
FKA Twigs' music integrates elements of alternative R&B, electronic, and art pop, characterized by glitchy percussion, layered falsetto vocals, and atmospheric textures that prioritize emotional intimacy over conventional structures.[87][88] Her debut album LP1 (2014) employs futuristic electronic beats blended with nostalgic instrumentation, such as harp and strings manipulated to evoke R&B tropes in distorted forms, creating a sense of vulnerability and sensuality through sparse arrangements and bone-rattling bass.[89][90] In production, Twigs frequently self-produces or co-produces tracks, emphasizing granular details like waveform manipulation to enhance transients—for instance, slicing vocal peaks with minimal crossfades on Eusexua (2024) to amplify raw, percussive qualities in her delivery.[91] Collaborations with producers such as Koreless, Nicolas Jaar, and Daniel Lopatin contribute to her experimental edge, incorporating hyperpop glitches and industrial influences while avoiding rigid genre adherence, as seen in Magdalene (2019)'s textural depth achieved through co-production on most tracks.[88][92] Her approach favors emotional impact via unconventional layering, such as multi-tracked whispers and reverb-heavy spacing, which heighten high-frequency elements and spatial dynamics across releases like CAPRISONGS (2022).[93][94] This methodology reflects her dance background, where rhythmic precision informs beat construction, resulting in music that defies expectations by twisting R&B sensuality into avant-garde forms without relying on mainstream polish.[87][89] On Magdalene, she refined vocal writing to suit her range, integrating orchestral swells and electronic fragmentation for a "complex" sonic palette that prioritizes idiosyncratic texture over accessibility.[92][95]Influences and Collaborations
FKA twigs has cited a range of artists as key influences, including Björk for her genre-bending experimentation and vocal innovation, Kate Bush for theatrical expression and narrative depth, and Nina Simone for emotive vocal delivery and personal storytelling.[96][88] Additional inspirations encompass Adam and the Ants and Siouxsie and the Banshees for post-punk aesthetics, as well as Enya's oceanic soundscapes shaping elements of her 2019 album Magdalene.[97][88] These draw from electronic, alternative, and soul traditions, informing her fusion of R&B, electronic, and avant-garde styles without adhering to conventional genre boundaries.[98] Her collaborations often involve prominent producers and guest artists, emphasizing innovative production. On her debut album LP1 (released August 6, 2014), twigs partnered with Arca for multiple tracks' glitchy electronic frameworks, alongside Emile Haynie, Devonté Hynes (of Blood Orange), Paul Epworth, and Clams Casino, blending hip-hop beats with ethereal vocals.[99] Arca continued as a frequent collaborator, co-producing "Tears in the Club" featuring The Weeknd on the 2022 mixtape Caprisongs (January 14 release), with additional contributions from Cirkut and el Guincho.[100] Caprisongs also featured artists like Jorja Smith, Rema, Shygirl, and Pa Salieu, expanding her sound into dancehall and pop territories, while producers such as Mike Dean added layered textures.[72] Later works, including the 2024 visual album Eusexua, involved Koreless in production, maintaining her emphasis on boundary-pushing partnerships.[91]Visual Aesthetics and Performance
FKA Twigs' visual aesthetics emphasize era-specific themes, with early works like LP1 (2014) drawing on GHE20G0TH1K influences featuring layered gothic elements, evolving to the baroque and ethereal motifs in Magdalene (2019), where she incorporated religious iconography to explore vulnerability and redemption.[101][102] Her experimental avant-pop style balances bold experimentation with underlying elegance, often masterminded by herself in collaboration with stylists and directors.[103] Music videos form a core of her visual output, laden with symbolic depth that invites deciphering, contrasting superficial modern visuals by prioritizing narrative substance.[104] For "Cellophane" (2019), directed by Andrew Thomas Huang, Twigs underwent a year of intensive pole-performance training to execute physically demanding sequences symbolizing emotional exposure, culminating in Grammy-nominated visuals.[105][106] Earlier videos, uploaded to YouTube starting in 2012, established her reputation for striking, enigmatic imagery accompanying EPs like EP1 and EP2.[107] In live performances, Twigs integrates rigorous choreography rooted in her backup dancing background (2007–2011), blending vocal delivery with athletic movement across tours and events.[108] Her Eusexua tour (2024–present), choreographed by Imre and Marne van Opstal alongside creative director Jordan Hemingway, features synchronized group dynamics and individual pole elements, as showcased in festival appearances like Montreux Jazz Festival (July 2025) emphasizing her physical fitness.[109][110] Fashion-integrated shows, such as at London Fashion Week (September 2024) with On Running's "THE BODY IS ART," highlight rhythmic contortions and earth-inspired motifs, fusing performance art with commercial contexts.[111][112] These elements underscore a holistic approach where visuals and movement amplify thematic intimacy and resilience, often performed with live ensembles for immersive effect.[113]Controversies
Relationship with Shia LaBeouf and Resulting Lawsuit
FKA twigs met Shia LaBeouf in mid-2018 on the set of Honey Boy, a semi-autobiographical film written and produced by LaBeouf in which twigs was cast as his on-screen romantic partner.[65] [114] The two began a romantic relationship shortly thereafter, which lasted approximately nine months until their breakup in June 2019.[115] [116] On December 10, 2020, twigs filed a civil lawsuit against LaBeouf in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleging sexual battery, assault, and intentional infliction of emotional distress during their relationship.[65] [71] In the complaint, twigs claimed LaBeouf subjected her to "relentless abuse," including verbal and mental harassment, physical violence such as choking her during sex without consent and throwing her against a car on Valentine's Day 2019, deliberate isolation from friends and family, and knowingly transmitting a sexually transmitted disease to her.[117] [118] She sought unspecified compensatory and punitive damages, asserting the conduct caused her post-traumatic stress disorder and required therapy.[119] LaBeouf responded publicly in a statement to The New York Times, acknowledging personal shortcomings by saying, "I have been abusive in relationships in the past" and that he was "not the partner Twigs needed," but he disputed the specific allegations of assault and battery as "not accurate."[65] The actor's legal team filed motions to dismiss parts of the suit and argued against twigs' request for a restraining order, claiming the relationship ended due to work conflicts rather than abuse.[63] The case proceeded through discovery and pre-trial motions over four years, with a trial initially set for 2023 but delayed multiple times.[120] On July 22, 2025, the parties reached a confidential out-of-court settlement, after which twigs requested dismissal of all claims with prejudice, preventing refiling; terms were not disclosed, and LaBeouf made no admission of liability.[71] [117] In October 2025, twigs stated publicly that she was "moving on" but continued to express concerns about her safety around LaBeouf.[121]Calvin Klein Campaign and Regulatory Backlash
In late 2023, Calvin Klein launched a promotional campaign featuring FKA Twigs as part of its "Calvins or Nothing" underwear line, with posters depicting the artist in a loosely draped denim shirt that emphasized her physical form over the apparel.[122] The imagery portrayed Twigs in a sensual pose, highlighting her body in black-and-white photography.[123] On January 10, 2024, the UK's Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) banned the poster following two public complaints that it objectified women and was overly sexualised.[122] The ASA ruled the ad irresponsible, stating it centred on Twigs' physical attributes—such as her body and nudity—rather than the product, thereby presenting her as a "stereotypical sexual object" likely to cause serious offence.[122] [123] Notably, the ASA did not ban comparable Calvin Klein posters featuring Kendall Jenner or Jeremy Allen White, despite similar emphasis on physicality, prompting accusations of inconsistent application.[124] [125] FKA Twigs responded publicly on Instagram, rejecting the ASA's characterisation and asserting she felt empowered by the campaign, which she viewed as an artistic expression of strength, sensuality, and beauty through her body as a "canvas."[126] She highlighted perceived double standards, noting that ads featuring male celebrities like Jeremy Allen White had not faced similar scrutiny despite analogous sensuality.[125] [127] Calvin Klein defended the imagery as non-vulgar representations of confident, empowered women, aligning with the brand's history of provocative advertising.[124] The ruling drew widespread criticism for potential gender bias and censorship of artistic expression, particularly affecting women and the LGBT+ community, as voiced by Twigs and commentators.[128] [129] On March 6, 2024, the ASA partially reversed its decision, revoking the objectification ban after reviewing public feedback but upholding restrictions on untargeted displays accessible to minors due to the ad's overt sexuality.[128] [124] The regulator acknowledged the initial selective banning of Twigs' poster had been "widely criticised" and affirmed its willingness to adjust rulings based on broader context, including artistic intent.[128] [130]Positions on AI and Industry Practices
FKA twigs submitted written testimony to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Intellectual Property on April 30, 2024, highlighting artificial intelligence's risks to artists' control over their voice, likeness, and creative output.[131] In the statement, she argued that AI tools, while unable to capture the full depth of an artist's personal journey and emotional authenticity, empower unauthorized parties to replicate and disseminate mimicked versions of their work without consent, potentially eroding intellectual property rights.[132] She warned of practical harms, such as AI-generated impersonations enabling deceptive communications—like inciting cancellation campaigns against artists or even provoking physical attacks—stressing the ease with which such technology could disrupt professional relationships in the music industry.[133] To counter these threats proactively, twigs revealed she had spent the preceding year training an AI deepfake model of herself, designed to emulate her personality, tone, and multilingual responses for interactions with fans and journalists.[134] This self-initiated project, she explained, allows her to experiment with AI's capabilities under her own terms, advocating for artists' opt-in consent as a prerequisite for any commercial or exploitative uses by third parties.[135] She supported legislative measures, such as bans on non-consensual deepfakes, to safeguard living and deceased creators from industrial-scale misuse, while critiquing overly permissive exemptions for filmmaking that could normalize unauthorized replications.[136] Her position balances cautious innovation—evident in her personal adoption of the technology—with demands for robust federal protections to prevent AI from undermining artistic agency.[137] On music industry practices more broadly, twigs has described the sector as unforgiving, particularly for Black women, where darker skin tones face entrenched biases limiting visibility and opportunities compared to lighter-skinned counterparts.[20] She has rejected prevailing beauty standards in promotional content, criticizing music videos for prioritizing superficial aesthetics over substantive artistry, which she views as narrowing creative expression.[138] In a October 13, 2025, interview, she characterized the business as unsuitable for many due to its relentless demands, noting her ongoing internal conflict with its structures despite her persistence.[139] These critiques underscore her emphasis on authenticity and equity, aligning with her AI advocacy by framing technological and structural exploitations as interconnected threats to individual creators within the industry.Personal Life
Romantic Relationships
FKA Twigs began a relationship with actor Robert Pattinson in September 2014 after meeting through mutual connections in the music and film industries.[140] The couple became engaged in April 2015 during a trip to Japan, but ended the relationship in October 2017 following reports of on-and-off periods.[141] Twigs later described facing significant online harassment and racist abuse from Pattinson's fans during their time together, which she addressed publicly in interviews.[142] In 2018, Twigs entered a relationship with actor Shia LaBeouf after meeting on the set of his semiautobiographical film Honey Boy, where she had a supporting role; the relationship lasted until mid-2019.[143] Details of alleged abusive behavior during this period formed the basis of a subsequent lawsuit filed by Twigs against LaBeouf in December 2020 for sexual battery, assault, and emotional distress, which was settled out of court in July 2025.[144] Twigs was briefly linked to music industry executive Reuben Esser in 2019, following her split from LaBeouf.[145] She dated musician Matty Healy, frontman of The 1975, from 2020 to 2022, a period marked by low public visibility.[145] Since approximately 2023, Twigs has been in a relationship with photographer and filmmaker Jordan Hemingway, with whom she has collaborated professionally on projects including her Spring 2025 advertising campaign for the fashion brand On.[146] The couple has appeared together publicly, including at Paris Fashion Week events in October 2025, and share creative spaces such as a joint dance and photo studio.[147][148]Health Issues and Recovery
In December 2017, FKA Twigs underwent laparoscopic surgery to remove six large fibroid tumors from her uterus, a procedure she publicly disclosed in an Instagram post on May 9, 2018.[149][150] She described the tumors' sizes as comparable to two apples, three kiwis, and one satsuma, noting that they caused severe symptoms including excruciating abdominal pain, bloating that distorted her silhouette, and heavy menstrual bleeding, which she likened to a "constant flow of sadness" affecting her daily life and performances.[151][152] Uterine fibroids, non-cancerous growths common in up to one-third of women of reproductive age, were the underlying cause; Twigs emphasized in interviews that the condition's pain is often underrecognized and dismissed, contributing to delayed diagnosis.[153] The surgery, while minimally invasive with generally favorable recovery outcomes, temporarily impacted her physicality and self-perception, leading her to state that it "knocked my confidence as a woman" and prompted a reevaluation of her body image and femininity.[58][154] Twigs documented her recovery process through social media and subsequent discussions, highlighting a gradual return to strength via pole dancing and other physical disciplines, which she shared in a May 2018 video demonstrating reclaimed mobility and sensuality.[155] By mid-2018, she reported feeling more aligned with her pre-surgery self, attributing resilience to introspection and rejecting societal pressures around bodily perfection, though she noted lingering emotional adjustments in a 2020 podcast reflection on the ordeal's psychological toll.[151][156] In a 2024 interview, she reiterated the experience's lasting influence on her holistic approach to health, framing it as a catalyst for greater bodily awareness without further surgical interventions reported.[15]Public Activism and Philosophical Views
In September 2022, FKA Twigs signed the Musicians for Palestine pledge, joining over 900 artists in refusing to perform in Israel until it ends its occupation of Palestinian territories, dismantles the separation wall, and addresses policies described in the pledge as apartheid.[157][158] In February 2021, she collaborated with Getty Images on an initiative to donate content and resources aimed at empowering Black storytellers and highlighting Black history through authentic imagery.[159] Her 2021 collaboration with Headie One on "Don't Judge Me" addressed experiences of racism and isolation, with its music video depicting a struggle against invisible forces of oppression while promoting resilience in Black creative communities.[160] Twigs has expressed an eclectic approach to spirituality, describing it as a "mixtape" of elements drawn from various cultures, religions, and practices that resonate personally, emphasizing mindfulness and ethical living over rigid dogma.[161] She has highlighted the spiritual dimensions of daily routines like stretching, viewing them as meditative acts that foster physical and mental tightness release, particularly around the hips.[162] In her art, such as the 2019 album Magdalene, she draws on biblical figures like Mary Magdalene to explore themes of feminine transcendence, pain, and purity without requiring binary choices between power and sanctity.[163] Twigs has stated a strong passion for spirituality's societal role, integrating it into her creative process alongside interests in religion and the afterlife.[164] On feminism, Twigs has articulated a journey emphasizing women's magical powers, vulnerability, and unapologetic self-expression, critiquing patriarchal influences in music while advocating for multifaceted femininity.[165] She has championed female empowerment through body autonomy and sensuality, rejecting labels of over-sexualization in contexts like her 2023 Calvin Klein campaign, which she defended as authentic self-representation.[166] In broader cultural critique, during a May 2025 interview that gained viral attention, Twigs questioned the absence of "thinkers" in contemporary pop culture, arguing for deeper intellectual engagement amid superficiality and blocked creativity driven by external pressures.[167][168]Other Professional Endeavors
Acting Roles in Film and Television
FKA Twigs made her feature film acting debut in the 2019 drama Honey Boy, directed by Alma Har'el, where she portrayed a supporting character credited as Shy Girl.[169] The semi-autobiographical film, written by and starring Shia LaBeouf as a fictionalized version of his younger self, explores themes of child stardom and familial dysfunction, with Twigs appearing in scenes depicting fleeting romantic encounters.[170] In 2024, Twigs starred as Shelly Webster in Rupert Sanders' The Crow, a supernatural revenge thriller reimagining James O'Barr's 1989 graphic novel.[171] She played the murdered fiancée of protagonist Eric Draven (Bill Skarsgård), whose resurrection drives the plot; Twigs drew on personal experiences of trauma to inform her portrayal, emphasizing sensory details like scent to deepen the character's authenticity.[172] The film, which faced production delays and reshoots, received mixed reviews for its visual style but criticism for narrative pacing and emotional depth in lead performances. Twigs has secured roles in upcoming films, including David Lowery's Mother Mary (expected 2025), an ensemble drama with Anne Hathaway as a pop star and Michaela Coel, though her specific character remains undisclosed.[173] She also leads as Mary, mother of Jesus, in the biblical horror The Carpenter's Son, co-starring Nicolas Cage, with a teaser trailer released on August 28, 2025, highlighting her in a reimagined nativity narrative infused with supernatural elements.[174] No major television acting roles have been credited to Twigs as of October 2025; her screen appearances prior to Honey Boy were primarily as a dancer or in music-related shorts, such as her self-directed Pendulum (2015).[10]Fashion, Modeling, and Commercial Work
FKA Twigs has pursued modeling and commercial endorsements alongside her music career, often blending her artistic sensibilities with brand campaigns focused on movement, body positivity, and avant-garde aesthetics. In 2017, she collaborated with Nike as creative director for the Zonal Strength Tights campaign, directing a video featuring athlete English Gardner that emphasized strength and performance.[175] Her partnership with Swiss sportswear brand On began in April 2024, positioning her as a creative partner who models, directs, and contributes to collections. This included the Fall/Winter 2024 "The Body is Art" campaign, launched on September 3, 2024, which featured Twigs in dynamic poses to highlight training apparel inspired by her manifesto viewing the body as artistic expression.[176][177] On January 9, 2025, she reprised the role by directing and starring in a campaign for the brand's training collection, showcasing cut-out tops and open designs in a futuristic setting.[178] By June 2025, the collaboration extended to Twigs designing elements of On's Spring/Summer 2025 sportswear line, marking her entry into fashion design.[179][180] Twigs has also fronted campaigns for broader fashion labels. In May 2024, she modeled Burberry's Olympia bag alongside Shygirl and Kendall Jenner in promotional imagery.[181] For H&M's Spring 2025 collection, unveiled on March 12, 2025, she appeared with Tyla and Caroline Polachek in visuals evoking bohemian-urban femininity through airy garments and jewelry.[182][183] Additional commercial work includes co-directing a 2025 ad for luggage brand Away with Jordan Hemingway, emphasizing transportive themes, and directing a 2021 Facebook Olympics spot on skateboarding.[184][185] These endeavors often draw on her dance background, prioritizing experiential narratives over traditional endorsement models.Discography
Studio Albums
FKA twigs' debut studio album, LP1, was released on August 11, 2014, by Young Turks.[186] The record comprises ten tracks, with production handled primarily by twigs alongside collaborators such as Arca, Emile Haynie, Devonté Hynes (Lightspeed Champion), and Clams Casino.[99] Recorded between 2013 and 2014, it features electronic and alternative R&B elements, including glitchy beats and ethereal vocals.[186] Her second studio album, Magdalene, followed on November 8, 2019, also via Young Turks.[187] Self-produced by twigs with co-producers including Nicolas Jaar, Koreless, Skrillex, and Benny Blanco, the nine-track album incorporates art pop and glitch hop influences, recorded across London, New York, and Los Angeles over three years.[188] Notable contributions include a guest appearance by Future on "holy terrain."[187] The third studio album, Eusexua, arrived on January 24, 2025, through Young and Atlantic Records.[189] It marks twigs' first release under the joint label venture and features production input from collaborators like Koreless and Marius de Vries, blending experimental electronic sounds with her signature vocal layering.[190]| Album | Release date | Label(s) | Producer(s) (selected) |
|---|---|---|---|
| LP1 | August 11, 2014 | Young Turks | FKA twigs, Arca, Emile Haynie |
| Magdalene | November 8, 2019 | Young Turks | FKA twigs, Nicolas Jaar, Koreless |
| Eusexua | January 24, 2025 | Young, Atlantic | FKA twigs, Koreless, Marius de Vries |
Extended Plays and Mixtapes
FKA twigs' debut extended play, EP1, was independently released on vinyl on 4 December 2012, consisting of four tracks: "Weak Spot", "Ache", "Breathe", and "Hide".[191] The project featured minimal electronic production emphasizing twigs' layered vocals and featured collaborations with producer Tic.[191] It was later reissued digitally in 2013 following her signing with Young Turks.[192] Her second EP, EP2, followed on 17 September 2013 via Young Turks in formats including CD, vinyl, and digital download.[193] The four-track release—"How's That", "Ride It", "Water Me", and "Unfinished"—showcased evolving production with Arca, incorporating glitchy electronics and R&B influences.[193] M3LL155X, released digitally on 13 August 2015 by Young Turks, comprises five tracks: "Figure 8" (featuring Arca), "I'm Your Doll" (featuring Swae Lee), "In Time" (featuring Koreless), "Glass & Patron" (featuring Partna Mike), and "Mothercreep".[51] [194] Accompanied by a 16-minute self-directed short film incorporating four of the songs, the EP explores themes of sensuality and power dynamics through trap-infused beats and atmospheric soundscapes.[195] twigs released her sole mixtape to date, CAPRiSONGS, on 14 January 2022 under Atlantic Records, featuring 17 tracks with guest appearances from artists including The Weeknd, Rema, and Daniel Caesar.[196] The project blends pop, dancehall, and hip-hop elements, drawing from personal experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic, and was promoted with singles like "oh my love" and "honda".[196]Reception and Legacy
Critical Acclaim and Commercial Performance
FKA Twigs' debut studio album LP1 (2014) received widespread critical acclaim, earning a Metacritic score of 86 out of 100 based on 38 reviews, with critics praising its experimental R&B elements and innovative production.[197] Her second album Magdalene (2019) was similarly lauded for defying genre conventions and delivering cohesive artistry, positioning it as a strong late-year contender among reviewers.[198] The mixtape Caprisongs (2022) garnered a Metacritic score of 80 from 19 reviews, noted for its playful intimacy and self-assured tone.[199] Her third studio album Eusexua (2025) achieved even higher praise, with a Metacritic score of 88 from initial reviews rising to 90, including Pitchfork's 9.1 rating and designation as Best New Music for its fusion of club elements and sensual conceptual depth.[200] [78] [201] Commercially, Twigs' releases have achieved modest mainstream success, primarily within niche electronic and dance genres. Eusexua marked her highest Billboard 200 peak at number 24, alongside debuting at number 1 on the Top Dance/Electronic Albums chart—her fourth such chart-topper—while selling nearly 12,500 pure copies in its first US week, her biggest sales debut.[202] [203] [204] Earlier albums performed lower on the Billboard 200: LP1 at 30, Magdalene at 54, and Caprisongs at 91.[202] In the UK, her projects have not cracked the top 10 on the Official Albums Chart, reflecting a cult following rather than broad pop crossover, though Eusexua secured her strongest pure sales week to date.[205] Streaming metrics on platforms like Spotify underscore sustained fan engagement, but physical and digital sales remain in the low tens of thousands per release, aligning with her avant-garde positioning over mass-market appeal.[206]Criticisms and Cultural Impact
FKA Twigs has faced public scrutiny primarily over her high-profile relationship with actor Shia LaBeouf, which she alleged involved severe abuse. In December 2020, she filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court accusing LaBeouf of sexual battery, assault, and intentional infliction of emotional distress during their relationship from 2018 to 2019.[65] The suit detailed specific incidents, including LaBeouf allegedly choking her, throwing her against a car on Valentine's Day 2019, forcing her to walk barefoot on pavement after trapping her in a car, and compelling her to pick up a sick dog during a rainstorm, resulting in the animal's death.[118] Twigs claimed LaBeouf isolated her from friends and family, exhibited "relentless" verbal abuse, and transmitted a sexually transmitted disease to her.[144] She sought $10 million in damages. LaBeouf denied the allegations but admitted to problematic behavior, stating he underwent therapy as a result.[71] The case was settled out of court on July 22, 2025, with terms remaining confidential; Twigs requested dismissal with prejudice, preventing refiling.[117] In an October 2025 interview, Twigs reflected that while she was committed to a "constructive path forward," she would not claim to feel safe around LaBeouf.[207] Other criticisms have been limited and largely confined to fan discussions or isolated reviews questioning elements of her artistic evolution, such as perceived shifts toward more accessible pop structures in albums like Caprisongs (2022) and Eusexua (2025), or occasional immaturity in thematic execution.[208] A 2014 review of her debut LP1 challenged its originality within electronic music landscapes, though such views have not dominated critical reception.[209] Twigs has exerted significant influence on contemporary music and visual culture through her genre-defying fusion of electronic, R&B, and experimental elements, often integrated with intricate choreography and multimedia visuals. Her work has reshaped aesthetics in alternative pop, emphasizing singularity over categorization and drawing from diverse influences like ballet, voguing, and underground rave scenes to challenge traditional performance norms.[98] [210] As a mixed-race artist, she has defied industry pigeonholing of artists of color into specific genres, broadening representations of femininity and sexuality in media by blending vulnerability with empowerment in her lyrics and imagery.[89] [211] Her impact extends to fashion and interdisciplinary art, where she has served as a muse for designers like Alexander McQueen and influenced discussions on gender roles and eroticism through subconsciously political explorations of desire and identity.[212] [88] Twigs has expressed greater confidence in her cultural resonance—evident in the emulation of her visual and sonic innovations—than in commercial metrics like streaming numbers.[213] This legacy positions her as a pivotal figure in elevating peripheral experimental sounds to mainstream awareness, fostering a more fluid, multi-disciplinary approach in pop music.[14]Awards and Nominations
FKA Twigs has received recognition primarily for her innovative music videos, albums, and stage performances, accumulating several nominations from prestigious UK and international awards bodies, though with fewer outright wins. Her accolades include victories at the MOBO Awards and NME Awards, reflecting acclaim in video artistry and solo artistry within alternative and electronic genres.[214][215] She earned one Grammy nomination for Best Music Video for "Cellophane" at the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards held on January 26, 2020, but did not win.[8] For the Mercury Prize, Twigs was shortlisted in 2014 alongside artists like Damon Albarn and Jungle for her debut album LP1, and again in 2025 for Eusexua, though Sam Fender won the latter with People Watching on October 16, 2025.[216][217][218] At the BRIT Awards, she secured nominations in 2015 for British Female Solo Artist and British Breakthrough Act following performances at the nominations launch, and in 2020 for British Female Solo Artist amid competition from artists like Mabel and Charli XCX.[219][220][221] She was also nominated for Best International Act: UK at the 2015 BET Awards.[222]| Year | Award | Category | Result | Nominated work |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | MOBO Awards | Best Video | Won | "Pendulum" |
| 2020 | NME Awards | Best British Solo Act | Won | General (post-Magdalene) |
| 2022 | NME Awards | Godlike Genius | Won | Career achievement |