InfluenceAsia 2020 Artists 100 visual archive

Cultural Influence Research

2020 InfluenceAsia Artists 100

InfluenceAsia 2020 Artists 100 recognizes the Asian and Asian-diaspora artists whose work carried exceptional cultural force across borders in a year when physical stages narrowed and global attention moved through screens, streams, publications, exhibitions, cinema libraries, online concerts, and shared cultural memory.

  • Asia, Asian-led artistic ecosystems, and globally visible Asian-diaspora artists
  • 100-point editorial research scale
  • InfluenceAsia Research and Editorial Desk

Editorial Frame

2020 Annual Edition

International influence must be observable through body of work, 2020 relevance, cross-border audience movement, critical authority, cultural transmission, and durable artistic signature

Short Introduction

Short introduction

InfluenceAsia 2020 Artists 100 recognizes the Asian and Asian-diaspora artists whose work carried exceptional cultural force across borders in a year when physical stages narrowed and global attention moved through screens, streams, publications, exhibitions, cinema libraries, online concerts, and shared cultural memory.

Editorial Positioning

Editorial positioning

InfluenceAsia 2020 Artists 100 is an original InfluenceAsia editorial ranking, research compilation, index structure and publication work. InfluenceAsia alone determines the selection framework, scoring logic, final order, written analysis, page presentation and publication posture for this annual edition.

Annual Relevance

Annual relevance

In 2020, artists were judged not only by new releases, but by how their work remained active in public life under disrupted conditions. Streaming catalogues, digital concerts, home viewing, translated literature, online exhibitions, documentary circulation, and global fan communities became decisive signals of cultural mobility.

Editorial Promise

Editorial promise

InfluenceAsia publishes this 2020 edition as a controlled original ranking under the InfluenceAsia name. Reproduction, scraping, republication, translation, commercial reuse, database extraction, derivative ranking use, or removal of InfluenceAsia attribution is prohibited without prior written authorization from InfluenceAsia.

Annual Theme

Borderless Presence

The 2020 edition is built around Borderless Presence: the capacity of an artist to remain culturally present when borders, tours, festivals, cinemas, galleries, and public gatherings were restricted.

The year rewarded artists with portable worlds: songs that travelled through headphones, films rediscovered at home, books that crossed language and geography, visual practices that lived beyond the museum room, and public identities able to move between cultures without losing artistic identity.

Top Ranked

The leading cultural signals of 2020

The top tier foregrounds artists and creative entities whose work carried exceptional international reach, artistic authority, cross-cultural recognition and year-specific relevance.

No. 1 / Group

BTS

  • South Korea
  • Music group
  • 98.8 score

Global pop leadership, stadium-scale fandom, digital concert strength, and a landmark 2020 hit that moved Korean pop further into the center of mainstream global music.

InfluenceAsia ranks BTS first because their 2020 influence combined mass reach, artistic self-definition, digital adaptability, and cultural translation. Their impact was not limited to chart performance; they changed how non-English pop could circulate, how fandom could organize across borders, and how an Asian act could occupy the center of global youth culture without abandoning its original identity.

No. 2

Bong Joon-ho

Filmmaker / South Korea

A defining year for Korean cinema, with Parasite turning subtitled cinema into a central global cultural conversation.

No. 3

BLACKPINK

Music group / South Korea

A peak year of global pop visibility, fashion alignment, multilingual fandom, and one of the most internationally visible Korean albums of 2020.

No. 4

Yayoi Kusama

Contemporary art / Japan

A living visual language of infinity rooms, dots, accumulation, and public imagination that remained instantly global even when museums were constrained.

No. 5

Hayao Miyazaki

Animation filmmaking / Japan

A generational animation auteur whose worlds remained central to global home viewing, artistic education, and Japan's soft-power imagination.

Research Dimensions

A weighted editorial index for cultural influence

Each placement reflects a composite reading of the annual record rather than a single popularity metric.

International Reach

22 pts

The measurable breadth of the artist's audience, distribution, touring history, translation, streaming circulation, exhibition footprint, screen availability, or global professional presence.

Cross-border audience movement, geographic spread, catalogue portability, global discoverability, and visibility outside the artist's primary domestic market.

Artistic Authority

18 pts

The degree to which the artist has shaped standards of craft, genre, form, image-making, performance, authorship, or creative language.

Signature style, critical respect, body-of-work depth, peer influence, technical distinction, and contribution to the evolution of a field.

Cross-cultural Recognition

16 pts

The artist's capacity to be understood, discussed, adapted, collected, watched, heard, or cited across languages and regions.

Translation power, diaspora relevance, global media legibility, international collaborations, and cultural bridge value.

2020 Relevance

16 pts

The artist's presence in the cultural year itself.

New releases, major 2020 visibility, digital programming, awards-season movement, streaming rediscovery, public conversation, or pandemic-era audience connection.

Cultural Conversation

14 pts

The extent to which the artist influenced taste, identity, representation, public imagination, or the global perception of Asian creativity.

Narrative change, representation, social meaning, fandom intensity, intellectual influence, and symbolic power.

Platform Adaptability

8 pts

The artist's ability to remain visible through digital, streaming, publishing, online exhibition, social, or hybrid formats.

Online concerts, digital catalogues, global platforms, virtual circulation, home-viewing strength, and resilient audience access.

Enduring Signature

6 pts

The durability and recognizability of the artist's creative identity beyond one news cycle.

Iconic works, repeatable visual or sonic language, long-term influence, and continued relevance across generations.

Full Ranking

InfluenceAsia 2020 Artists 100

A searchable 100-entry edition with field, base, annual signal and score.

Showing 1-25 of 100 entries

Order Artist / Entity Base Field 2020 Signal Score
No.01 BTSGroup South Korea Music group Global pop leadership, stadium-scale fandom, digital concert strength, and a landmark 2020 hit that moved Korean pop further into the center of mainstream global music. 98.8
No.02 Bong Joon-hoIndividual South Korea Filmmaker A defining year for Korean cinema, with Parasite turning subtitled cinema into a central global cultural conversation. 98.4
No.03 BLACKPINKGroup South Korea Music group A peak year of global pop visibility, fashion alignment, multilingual fandom, and one of the most internationally visible Korean albums of 2020. 98.1
No.04 Yayoi KusamaIndividual Japan Contemporary art A living visual language of infinity rooms, dots, accumulation, and public imagination that remained instantly global even when museums were constrained. 97.4
No.05 Hayao MiyazakiIndividual Japan Animation filmmaking A generational animation auteur whose worlds remained central to global home viewing, artistic education, and Japan's soft-power imagination. 97.2
No.06 A.R. RahmanIndividual India Music composition A cross-border composer whose film music, live repertoire, and multilingual catalogue continued to define Indian sound for global audiences. 96.9
No.07 Shah Rukh KhanIndividual India Screen performance A benchmark for Bollywood's worldwide recognition, diaspora affinity, and star-led cultural export. 96.5
No.08 Priyanka Chopra JonasIndividual India / United States Screen performance A sustained bridge between Indian cinema, global television, film, beauty, fashion, and public representation. 96.2
No.09 Ang LeeIndividual Taiwan / United States Filmmaking A rare cross-cultural auteur whose filmography moved between Chinese-language intimacy, Hollywood scale, and formal experimentation. 95.9
No.10 Takashi MurakamiIndividual Japan Contemporary art A defining figure in the movement between fine art, anime-inflected image systems, luxury, collectibles, and global pop aesthetics. 95.5
No.11 Ai WeiweiIndividual China / Europe Contemporary art A globally visible artist whose work combined installation, documentary, architecture, dissent, and public ethics. 95.1
No.12 Haruki MurakamiIndividual Japan Literature A translated literary phenomenon whose novels remained a global entry point into Japanese surrealism, solitude, memory, and modern alienation. 94.8
No.13 Jackie ChanIndividual Hong Kong / China Screen performance A global action-comedy icon whose physical cinema language remained one of Asia's most recognizable screen exports. 94.5
No.14 Wong Kar-waiIndividual Hong Kong Filmmaking A visual auteur whose films continued to define global taste around mood, memory, romance, music, and urban longing. 94.2
No.15 Ryuichi SakamotoIndividual Japan Music composition A composer and performer whose influence crossed electronic music, film scoring, avant-garde practice, and environmental listening. 93.9
No.16 Michelle YeohIndividual Malaysia / Global Screen performance A screen artist whose career connected Hong Kong action, international cinema, franchise visibility, and Asian representation. 93.6
No.17 Anish KapoorIndividual India / United Kingdom Contemporary art A sculptor of monumental public presence whose forms entered both museum discourse and civic imagination. 93.2
No.18 G-DragonIndividual South Korea Music and fashion A K-pop auteur whose sound, image, fashion influence, and authorship shaped the international template for idol-artists. 93
No.19 Zhang YimouIndividual China Filmmaking A director whose cinema and visual staging helped define the global image of modern Chinese spectacle and historical drama. 92.7
No.20 Gong LiIndividual China / Singapore Screen performance A defining screen actor of Chinese-language cinema with durable international festival, arthouse, and crossover recognition. 92.5
No.21 Deepika PadukoneIndividual India Screen performance A leading Indian screen artist with global brand visibility, diaspora reach, and sustained cultural influence beyond film. 92.2
No.22 Yo-Yo MaIndividual United States / Chinese diaspora Classical music A cellist whose artistic presence connected classical performance, cross-cultural collaboration, and public humanism. 91.9
No.23 Lang LangIndividual China / Global Classical music A pianist whose virtuosity, media visibility, and education outreach made classical performance legible to broad global audiences. 91.7
No.24 Hirokazu Kore-edaIndividual Japan Filmmaking A major humanist filmmaker whose family dramas continued to anchor Japan's standing in contemporary world cinema. 91.4
No.25 Akira ToriyamaIndividual Japan Manga and character creation A manga artist whose Dragon Ball universe remained foundational to global anime, gaming, character culture, and youth imagination. 91.1
No.26 Chloe ZhaoIndividual China / United States Filmmaking Nomadland made her one of 2020's most closely watched directors, with a quiet cinematic language that travelled across festivals and critics. 90.9
No.27 Asghar FarhadiIndividual Iran Filmmaking A master of moral tension and family drama whose Iranian cinema reached global arthouse and awards audiences. 90.6
No.28 Song Kang-hoIndividual South Korea Screen performance A leading Korean actor whose long collaboration with major auteurs became newly visible to global audiences through Parasite. 90.4
No.29 Lee Byung-hunIndividual South Korea Screen performance A Korean actor with unusual range across local prestige drama, Hollywood action, and international genre visibility. 90.1
No.30 Aamir KhanIndividual India Screen performance and production An Indian actor-producer associated with socially resonant mainstream cinema and unusually strong international circulation. 89.8
No.31 Amitabh BachchanIndividual India Screen performance A living pillar of Indian screen culture whose voice, image, and intergenerational recognition remained internationally legible. 89.6
No.32 Kazuo IshiguroIndividual Japan / United Kingdom Literature A novelist whose restrained emotional architecture and translated readership kept Asian-born literary authorship in global focus. 89.3
No.33 Salman RushdieIndividual India / United Kingdom / United States Literature A novelist whose work remained central to the global conversation on migration, language, myth, freedom, and postcolonial imagination. 89.1
No.34 Orhan PamukIndividual Turkey Literature A novelist whose Istanbul-centered body of work carried Turkish memory, modernity, and identity into world literature. 88.8
No.35 Zhang ZiyiIndividual China Screen performance A Chinese actor whose martial-arts, historical, and arthouse screen roles made her a durable international cinema figure. 88.6
No.36 Tony Leung Chiu-waiIndividual Hong Kong Screen performance A Hong Kong actor whose stillness, emotional precision, and auteur collaborations shaped global cinephile culture. 88.3
No.37 Donnie YenIndividual Hong Kong / China Screen performance and martial arts A martial-arts screen artist whose Ip Man persona and action choreography extended Chinese action cinema to global audiences. 88.1
No.38 Irrfan KhanIndividual India Screen performance A late screen artist whose passing in 2020 intensified recognition of a career bridging Indian cinema, independent film, and global studio cinema. 87.9
No.39 Tadao AndoIndividual Japan Architecture A self-taught architect whose concrete, light, silence, and spatial discipline made Japanese minimalism globally influential. 87.6
No.40 Rei KawakuboIndividual Japan Fashion design A radical designer whose anti-fashion language and conceptual silhouettes continued to influence fashion, art, and image culture. 87.4
No.41 Yohji YamamotoIndividual Japan Fashion design A designer whose black tailoring, asymmetry, and philosophical minimalism carried Japanese fashion into global modernity. 87.1
No.42 Issey MiyakeIndividual Japan Fashion design A designer whose pleating, technology, movement, and democratic elegance shaped the international language of wearable design. 86.9
No.43 teamLabCollective Japan Digital art collective A collective whose immersive digital environments reached global museum, public art, and experiential design audiences. 86.6
No.44 Cai Guo-QiangIndividual China / United States Contemporary art A contemporary artist whose gunpowder drawings, explosions, and large-scale public works gave Chinese visual experimentation global spectacle. 86.4
No.45 Yoshitomo NaraIndividual Japan Contemporary art A painter and sculptor whose childlike figures, punk tenderness, and collectible image language moved between museums and pop culture. 86.1
No.46 Hiroshi SugimotoIndividual Japan / United States Photography and architecture An artist whose photographs, seascapes, theaters, and architectural projects linked time, perception, and Japanese conceptual rigor. 85.9
No.47 Lee UfanIndividual South Korea / Japan Contemporary art A painter, sculptor, and theorist whose Mono-ha and Dansaekhwa-related presence shaped Asian modernism in global art discourse. 85.6
No.48 John WooIndividual Hong Kong / United States Filmmaking A filmmaker whose heroic-bloodshed grammar permanently influenced global action cinema, editing, and gunplay choreography. 85.4
No.49 Park Chan-wookIndividual South Korea Filmmaking A Korean auteur whose genre control, visual precision, and moral intensity held global cult and critical authority. 85.1
No.50 Jia ZhangkeIndividual China Filmmaking A filmmaker whose work documented Chinese social transformation with rare international critical authority. 84.9
No.51 Hou Hsiao-hsienIndividual Taiwan Filmmaking A central auteur of Taiwanese cinema whose long takes, historical memory, and formal patience shaped global art cinema. 84.6
No.52 Ann HuiIndividual Hong Kong Filmmaking A Hong Kong New Wave filmmaker whose 2020 career recognition affirmed a body of work rooted in migration, memory, and social realism. 84.4
No.53 Jafar PanahiIndividual Iran Filmmaking An Iranian filmmaker whose constrained production methods and moral courage made his cinema internationally resonant. 84.1
No.54 Nuri Bilge CeylanIndividual Turkey Filmmaking and photography A Turkish auteur whose cinema joined landscape, interiority, and philosophical tension in the global arthouse canon. 83.9
No.55 Apichatpong WeerasethakulIndividual Thailand Filmmaking and visual art A Thai artist-filmmaker whose dream logic, memory, politics, and installation practice gave Southeast Asia a singular global cinema voice. 83.7
No.56 Shirin NeshatIndividual Iran / United States Contemporary art and film An artist whose photography, video, and film explored exile, gender, poetry, and Iranian identity for international audiences. 83.5
No.57 Mona HatoumIndividual Palestine / United Kingdom Contemporary art A Palestinian-born artist whose installations transformed domestic objects, maps, bodies, and displacement into globally legible tension. 83.3
No.58 Do Ho SuhIndividual South Korea / Global Contemporary art An artist whose fabric architectures and memory-based spaces translated migration, home, and identity into precise sculptural form. 83.1
No.59 Xu BingIndividual China / United States Contemporary art An artist whose language systems, pseudo-script, and book works made Chinese writing, translation, and perception globally discussable. 82.9
No.60 Cao FeiIndividual China Contemporary art and moving image A Chinese artist whose films, avatars, factories, and virtual worlds mapped urban transformation and digital life with international force. 82.7
No.61 Haegue YangIndividual South Korea / Germany Contemporary art An artist whose installations connected abstraction, craft, movement, diaspora, and sensory environments across major international art contexts. 82.5
No.62 Lee BulIndividual South Korea Contemporary art An artist whose cyborgs, architecture, utopian ruins, and feminist science-fiction forms shaped the global reading of Korean contemporary art. 82.3
No.63 Faye WongIndividual China / Hong Kong Music and screen performance A singer whose ethereal voice, Canto-pop and Mandarin-pop stature, and art-pop aura remained influential across Chinese-language culture. 82.1
No.64 Jay ChouIndividual Taiwan Music and screen A songwriter-performer whose fusion of R&B, Chinese instrumentation, rap, and pop balladry defined Mandarin pop across Asia and the diaspora. 81.9
No.65 Jolin TsaiIndividual Taiwan Music and performance A pop artist whose choreography, reinvention, queer-friendly imagery, and Mandarin-pop command kept her highly visible across Asia. 81.7
No.66 Eason ChanIndividual Hong Kong Music A vocalist whose Canto-pop and Mandarin repertoire gave Chinese-language pop one of its most respected contemporary voices. 81.5
No.67 IUIndividual South Korea Music and screen performance A singer-songwriter and actor whose authorship, vocal intimacy, and domestic dominance translated into growing international attention. 81.3
No.68 EXOGroup South Korea Music group A major Korean group whose vocal performance, Chinese-market history, and global fandom helped build the international K-pop system. 81.1
No.69 TWICEGroup South Korea / Japan / Taiwan Music group A Korean girl group with strong pan-Asian appeal, Japanese-market depth, and increasing global pop visibility by 2020. 80.9
No.70 SEVENTEENGroup South Korea Music group A self-producing Korean performance group whose choreography, fandom, and album momentum expanded internationally in 2020. 80.7
No.71 NCT 127Group South Korea / Global Music group A globally oriented Korean group whose modular concept, multilingual identity, and 2020 album cycle strengthened international reach. 80.5
No.72 PSYIndividual South Korea Music and entertainment A performer whose earlier global breakthrough permanently altered the visibility of Korean pop and viral music culture. 80.3
No.73 BoAIndividual South Korea / Japan Music A foundational Korean pop artist whose cross-market career helped establish the Japan-Korea pop pathway later used by global K-pop. 80.1
No.74 CLIndividual South Korea Music and performance A performer whose rap, fashion language, and solo identity gave Korean pop a sharp international image of female confidence. 79.9
No.75 Jackson WangIndividual Hong Kong / China / South Korea Music and performance A multilingual performer whose solo work, group visibility, fashion, and cross-border fanbase made him a pan-Asian pop figure. 79.7
No.76 Hikaru UtadaIndividual Japan / United States Music A bilingual songwriter whose albums, gaming soundtrack associations, and introspective pop language retained strong international recognition. 79.5
No.77 Makoto ShinkaiIndividual Japan Animation filmmaking An animation director whose romantic spectacle and sky-filled visual language made contemporary Japanese animation visible to global youth audiences. 79.3
No.78 Joe HisaishiIndividual Japan Music composition A composer whose melodies are inseparable from Japanese animation's global emotional memory. 79.1
No.79 Eiichiro OdaIndividual Japan Manga A manga creator whose long-running pirate epic remained one of the world's most durable serialized story universes. 78.9
No.80 BABYMETALGroup Japan Music group A Japanese group whose metal-idol hybrid created one of Asia's most distinctive global niche music exports. 78.7
No.81 ONE OK ROCKGroup Japan Music group A Japanese rock group with English-language reach, international touring history, and a global alternative-rock audience. 78.5
No.82 JojiIndividual Japan / Global Music A Japanese-born artist whose lo-fi R&B, internet-native authorship, and 2020 album visibility connected Asian creativity to global streaming youth culture. 78.3
No.83 Rina SawayamaIndividual Japan / United Kingdom Music A Japanese-British pop artist whose 2020 debut crystallized identity, genre collision, and diaspora expression in global pop criticism. 78.1
No.84 Rich BrianIndividual Indonesia / United States Music An Indonesian rapper whose career turned Southeast Asian internet-born music into a credible part of global hip-hop conversation. 77.9
No.85 NIKIIndividual Indonesia / United States Music An Indonesian singer-songwriter whose 2020 debut album strengthened Southeast Asian representation in global R&B and pop. 77.7
No.86 Agnez MoIndividual Indonesia Music and screen performance An Indonesian pop performer whose English-language releases, dance image, and international collaborations extended her beyond national celebrity. 77.5
No.87 YunaIndividual Malaysia / United States Music A Malaysian singer-songwriter whose gentle R&B-pop language carried Southeast Asian Muslim female artistry into global listening spaces. 77.3
No.88 Dimash KudaibergenIndividual Kazakhstan Music A Kazakh vocalist whose extreme range and multilingual performance culture created a rare Central Asian global fanbase. 77.1
No.89 Anoushka ShankarIndividual India / United Kingdom Music A sitarist and composer whose work carried Indian classical lineage into contemporary collaboration and global performance. 76.9
No.90 M.I.A.Individual Sri Lanka / United Kingdom Music and visual culture A musician and visual provocateur whose sound, graphics, migration politics, and club vocabulary influenced global alternative pop. 76.7
No.91 Diljit DosanjhIndividual India Music and screen performance A Punjabi singer-actor whose diaspora-driven audience and 2020 music visibility made him one of South Asia's strongest cross-border popular artists. 76.5
No.92 Nadine LabakiIndividual Lebanon Filmmaking and screen performance A Lebanese filmmaker-actor whose socially engaged cinema carried Arab stories into unusually broad international circulation. 76.3
No.93 Haifaa Al-MansourIndividual Saudi Arabia Filmmaking A Saudi filmmaker whose career opened international space for women's authorship from a historically underrepresented national cinema. 76.1
No.94 Waad Al-KateabIndividual Syria / United Kingdom Documentary filmmaking A Syrian documentary filmmaker whose personal war testimony became one of the most internationally visible nonfiction works around Syria. 75.9
No.95 Elia SuleimanIndividual Palestine Filmmaking and screen performance A Palestinian filmmaker whose deadpan cinema made exile, absurdity, and statelessness legible without surrendering artistic restraint. 75.7
No.96 Mira NairIndividual India / United States Filmmaking A filmmaker whose career connected Indian, Ugandan, American, and global stories with unusual warmth, political texture, and cross-cultural reach. 75.5
No.97 AwkwafinaIndividual United States / Chinese and Korean diaspora Screen performance and comedy A performer whose 2020 visibility helped normalize Asian-American comedic, dramatic, and television presence in mainstream culture. 75.3
No.98 Riz AhmedIndividual United Kingdom / Pakistani diaspora Screen performance and music An actor-musician whose 2020 work intensified global attention around sound, identity, performance, and British-Asian authorship. 75.1
No.99 Dev PatelIndividual United Kingdom / Indian diaspora Screen performance An actor whose international film career made South Asian presence central to prestige, literary, and popular screen adaptation. 74.9
No.100 Iko UwaisIndividual Indonesia Screen performance and martial arts An Indonesian martial-arts actor whose screen fighting style gave Southeast Asian action cinema clear global visibility. 74.7

Editorial Method

Editorial authority, scoring system and rights notice

Written from the close of 2020, with no reliance on later career events. InfluenceAsia controls the annual framework, ranking order, scoring interpretation, publication language and rights posture for this edition.

InfluenceAsia Authority

Controlled editorial framework

InfluenceAsia 2020 Artists 100 is an original InfluenceAsia editorial ranking, research compilation, index structure and publication work. InfluenceAsia alone determines the selection framework, scoring logic, final order, written analysis, page presentation and publication posture for this annual edition.

2020publication perspective
100ranked entries
7weighted dimensions
100point editorial scale

Scoring Architecture

How the order is formed

  1. Ranking modelInfluenceAsia applied a 100-point editorial research model across seven dimensions: International Reach, Artistic Authority, Cross-cultural Recognition, 2020 Relevance, Cultural Conversation, Platform Adaptability, and Enduring Signature.
  2. Evaluation periodThe editorial record was assessed through 31 December 2020. Later achievements are not used as ranking evidence in this edition.
  3. Evidence typeReview considered public artistic output, release history, performance record, exhibition and publication footprint, global screen or music circulation, translated readership, international professional recognition, durable fan communities, and the artist's visible role in cultural conversation.
  4. Comparability ruleBecause the list spans disciplines, InfluenceAsia did not compare a novelist to a pop group through identical commercial metrics. Each artist was first evaluated inside their field, then normalized through cross-disciplinary influence criteria.
  5. Recency ruleA major 2020 release improved placement, but did not automatically outrank a deeper body of work. The list rewards artists whose work was active in the cultural year, whether through new output, rediscovery, digital circulation, or enduring public presence.
  6. Group ruleArtistic groups are ranked as entities when the collective name, not any one member, is the principal unit of international recognition. Individual members are not separately ranked in this edition when their 2020 influence is primarily contained within the group.
  7. Integrity ruleInfluenceAsia excludes unverified personalities, inflated social-only relevance, purely local fame without cross-border evidence, and artists whose global profile depends mainly on events after 2020.
  8. Editorial judgmentFinal placement reflects InfluenceAsia's independent editorial judgment after research normalization, with commercial metrics treated only as contextual evidence where relevant.

Eligibility Gate

Who can be ranked

  • Asian connectionArtists may be born in Asia, professionally anchored in Asia, identified with an Asian creative ecosystem, or part of the Asian diaspora with internationally visible work.
  • Activity windowArtists must have meaningful public artistic presence by 2020. New work in 2020 is valuable but not mandatory when the existing body of work remained internationally active during the year.
  • Posthumous treatmentArtists who died during 2020 may be included when their work and public remembrance materially shaped the year's cultural record. Artists who died before 2020 are not included in this edition.
  • Groups and collectivesGroups, bands, and artistic collectives are eligible when the collective identity is the primary artistic vehicle and has distinct international recognition.
  • DisciplinesEligible disciplines include performing arts, recorded music, cinema, television, animation, manga, literature, contemporary art, design, architecture, fashion, documentary, and comedy.
  • ExclusionsThe list excludes athletes, politicians, business executives, fictional characters, meme-only personalities, unverified creators, and figures whose international relevance was primarily generated after 31 December 2020.
  • InfluenceAsia authorityInfluenceAsia retains full editorial authority over the 2020 Artists 100 selection, ranking order, scoring interpretation, annual theme, research dimensions and final publication language.

Index Frame

What the index measures

  • Index nameInfluenceAsia Artist Influence Index
  • Scoring scale100-point editorial research scale
  • Core principleInternational influence must be observable through body of work, 2020 relevance, cross-border audience movement, critical authority, cultural transmission, and durable artistic signature
  • Creative scopeMusic, cinema, screen performance, animation, literature, contemporary art, design, architecture, fashion, documentary, comedy, and cross-disciplinary practice

Rights & Enforcement

Original InfluenceAsia ranking. All rights reserved.

No reproduction, scraping, republication, translation, commercial reuse, database extraction, derivative ranking use, or removal of InfluenceAsia attribution is permitted without prior written authorization.

  • Original ranking authorityInfluenceAsia 2020 Artists 100 is an original InfluenceAsia ranking and editorial research work. InfluenceAsia reserves all rights in the ranking order, index design, scoring framework, annual theme, data compilation, written summaries, selection logic, page layout and publication language.
  • Unauthorized reproduction prohibitedNo part of this edition may be copied, republished, mirrored, scraped, translated, adapted, redistributed, licensed, sold, embedded, used for training, or incorporated into any database, media product, ranking product, commercial service or public archive without prior written authorization from InfluenceAsia.
  • Enforcement noticeUnauthorized use, removal of attribution, deceptive republication, automated extraction, commercial reuse, derivative publication or misrepresentation of InfluenceAsia authorship may be pursued through takedown notices, platform complaints, legal demand letters, injunctions, damages claims and any other remedies available to InfluenceAsia.
  • Mandatory attributionAny permitted reference must clearly identify InfluenceAsia as the source and must not imply partnership, sponsorship, approval, licensing, assignment of rights or editorial participation by InfluenceAsia unless separately agreed in writing.
  • Identification of third partiesArtist names, group names, work titles, labels, studios, publishers, platforms, galleries, institutions, national or regional descriptors and public career facts are used for identification, editorial commentary and cultural analysis. Rights in third-party names, marks, works, images and publicity remain with their respective owners.
  • No commercial affiliationInclusion in the ranking does not create or imply endorsement, sponsorship, representation, agency, partnership, licensing approval or commercial affiliation between InfluenceAsia and any listed artist, estate, label, studio, publisher, platform, gallery, company or institution.
  • Editorial statusThis edition is a cultural analysis and editorial ranking prepared from the 2020 publication perspective. InfluenceAsia may revise, expand, correct, archive, enforce or withdraw publication assets at its discretion.
  • Rights reservedAll rights not expressly granted in writing by InfluenceAsia are reserved.