Lexi Jones: Bowie's Daughter and Emerging Artist
Alexandria Zahra Jones — the daughter of David Bowie and Iman, now forging her own path as an artist.
Birth and Family Background
Alexandria Zahra Jones — known informally as Lexi — was born on August 15, 2000, in New York City, the only child of David Bowie and Somali-American supermodel Iman Abdulmajid. Her arrival represented a deeply significant personal milestone for both parents: Bowie was fifty-three years old and had spoken publicly about the profound joy that fatherhood brought him for a second time, more than two decades after the birth of his first child, filmmaker Duncan Jones, in 1971.
Lexi's heritage reflects a remarkable convergence of cultural lineages. Through Bowie, she carries the legacy of one of the most transformative figures in twentieth-century popular culture. Through Iman, she is connected to Somali heritage and the international fashion world. This dual inheritance has informed her own emerging creative identity, though she has been careful to develop an artistic voice on her own terms rather than as an extension of parental fame.
Childhood and the Commitment to Privacy
Bowie and Iman were fiercely protective of Lexi's privacy throughout her childhood. The family maintained a primary residence in a spacious apartment in Manhattan's SoHo neighbourhood. Bowie had largely withdrawn from public life following a cardiac emergency during his Reality Tour in 2004, and this period of seclusion — chronicled in accounts of his decade of silence— coincided with Lexi's formative years. She grew up with a father who was consistently present and engaged in daily family life to a degree that had not been possible during the height of his touring career.
Bowie rarely permitted Lexi to be photographed by the press and made minimal public references to her, a posture that Iman has continued to uphold. This commitment to shielding their daughter from media attention represents a deliberate contrast to the hyper-visibility that characterised Bowie's professional existence and reflects the priority both parents placed on preserving the normalcy of Lexi's upbringing.
Artistic Pursuits
Lexi Jones has emerged as a visual artist and creative practitioner in her own right. She has demonstrated particular interest in painting, drawing, and mixed-media work, sharing selections of her output through social media. Her visual work has drawn attention for its bold use of colour and form, and observers have noted resonances with the expressionist and outsider art traditions that Bowie himself collected and championed throughout his life.
Bowie was a dedicated collector and practitioner of visual art, and his extensive art collection— which included works by Damien Hirst, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and numerous contemporary British artists — constituted part of the environment in which Lexi was raised. The creative atmosphere of the Bowie-Iman household, saturated with art, music, and literature, provided a foundation for Lexi's own artistic development that few young artists could claim.
She has also participated in modelling, a field in which her mother's influence is self-evident. However, she has approached this work selectively, maintaining the privacy-conscious stance toward public life established by her parents during her childhood.
Relationship with David Bowie
Accounts from those close to the family consistently describe Bowie as a devoted and hands-on father during Lexi's childhood. His withdrawal from touring and public appearances after 2004 was motivated in significant part by his desire to be present for his daughter's upbringing. Friends and collaborators have recounted that Bowie walked Lexi to school, attended parent-teacher meetings, and embraced the routines of domestic life with an enthusiasm that surprised those who knew him primarily as a restless, peripatetic artist.
Bowie's final years, during which he privately battled liver cancer while recording the Blackstar album and composing the Lazarus musical, were spent largely in the company of his family. Lexi was fifteen years old when her father died on January 10, 2016. The impact of this loss on a teenager who had known her father primarily as a private, present parent — rather than as a global cultural figure — represents a dimension of Bowie's death that is frequently overlooked in public narratives focused on his artistic legacy.
Life After Bowie's Death
Following Bowie's death, Iman has continued to raise Lexi in New York while maintaining the family's longstanding commitment to privacy. Iman has occasionally shared glimpses of Lexi's life and artistic work through social media but has resisted requests for interviews or public appearances involving her daughter. Lexi's half-brother Duncan Jones — the acclaimed filmmaker responsible for Moon (2009) and Source Code(2011) — has spoken of sustaining a close relationship with his much younger sibling.
Bowie's estate, valued at approximately one hundred million dollars, was divided between Iman, Duncan, and Lexi, with provisions ensuring each beneficiary's financial security. Bowie also bequeathed the family's SoHo apartment to Iman and made specific arrangements for Lexi's inheritance upon reaching adulthood.
Public Presence and Identity
As Lexi Jones has entered adulthood, she has begun to establish a public identity that acknowledges her extraordinary parentage while asserting her independence as a creative individual. Her visual art, selective modelling work, and carefully managed social media presence suggest a young artist navigating the complex terrain of inherited fame with deliberation and self-awareness.
Within the broader narrative of the Bowie family, Lexi's story represents the most private chapter — a reminder that behind the decades of personas, performances, and reinventions, there existed a father who valued the quiet satisfactions of domestic life above the demands of public celebrity. Her emergence as an artist in her own right will inevitably be observed through the lens of her father's legacy, but the foundation laid by both Bowie and Iman suggests a young woman well-equipped to define her own creative trajectory.