MUZE Hair by Kiyah Wright
Kiyah Wright — Women of MUZE Vol. 001
Women of MUZEVol. 001

Kiyah Wright.

Beauty. Power. Alignment.

The founder of MUZE Hair on confidence, purpose, and redefining modern luxury beauty.

Issue N° 001The Founder Portfolio7 min read

Editor's Letter

Kiyah Wright didn't build MUZE Hair to follow trends. She built it to redefine what beauty feels like.

For years, Wright has occupied rare air in the beauty industry — trusted by celebrities, respected by professionals, and admired by women seeking transformation beyond the salon chair. Her work has always existed at the intersection of artistry and intention. But MUZE Hair represents something deeper than styling. It is the culmination of experience, discipline, identity, and purpose woven together into a modern luxury beauty brand.

"Beauty is not performance.It is presence."
— Kiyah Wright
Kiyah Wright photographed for Women of MUZE
Plate IKiyah Wright photographed for Women of MUZE.MMXXVI

Chapter I

The philosophy behind MUZE.

The Women of MUZE series begins here. With a founder whose presence reflects the same philosophy behind the brand she created: elevated, confident, refined, and unapologetically authentic.

Dressed in sculptural ivory tailoring against a muted editorial backdrop, these portraits capture more than a look. They capture alignment. There is softness in the imagery, but also precision. Ease, but also power. Every frame mirrors the modern woman MUZE Hair was designed for.

Kiyah Wright — editorial glance
"Luxury should feel personal,transformative, and intentional."

Chapter II

More than hair.

Hair has always been emotional territory. It carries memory, confidence, transformation, and identity. Wright understood this long before the beauty industry began speaking the language of empowerment. Her approach has never been surface-level. The mission has always centered on how women feel when they leave the mirror.

Confident. Seen. Elevated.

That philosophy is embedded into every detail of MUZE Hair. From formulation standards to education, visual identity, and community building, the brand operates with intention first. Luxury is not treated as excess. It is treated as care, precision, and experience.

Kiyah Wright — joyful laugh

Chapter III

Luxury with intention.

MUZE Hair exists for the woman stepping into a boardroom. The woman rebuilding herself after transition. The woman rediscovering softness. The woman learning to take up space again.

There are no loud distractions in these portraits. No overproduction. No excess. Just elegance, movement, texture, and confidence. The visual language mirrors the emotional language of the brand itself.

"Confidence changes the waywomen move through the world."

Chapter IV

The future of modern beauty.

In many ways, MUZE Hair reflects the future of modern beauty. Consumers no longer connect solely through products. They connect through alignment. Through storytelling. Through founders who embody the values they promote. Wright's authenticity becomes the bridge between aspiration and trust.

And that trust is what transforms a beauty brand into a lifestyle.

The Portfolio

In her own light.

The Pillars

Five principles, one woman.

I

Confidence

The quiet kind that does not need to announce itself.

II

Craftsmanship

Decades of artistry, distilled into every formulation.

III

Intentional Beauty

Each detail composed. Nothing left to accident.

IV

Salon Luxury

An experience that begins long before the chair.

V

Modern Femininity

Soft. Unbothered. Self-possessed.

This is more than beauty.
This is MUZE.

Kiyah Wright is building more than a brand. She's building a movement rooted in confidence, elevation, and purpose.

Continue the ritual

Step into the house of MUZE.

Beauty. Power. Alignment.

The Series

Women of MUZE.

A recurring journal series profiling women whose style, leadership, artistry, and personal stories inspire modern beauty culture — entrepreneurs, artists, executives, tastemakers, cultural leaders, beauty innovators.

Submissions

Nominate a Woman of MUZE.

Tell us about a woman whose presence has shaped the room you stand in.