Kanye West shared a topless photo of his wife Bianca Censori wearing a fur cat mask with his 19.9 million Instagram followers on Friday night, hours after she had stepped out in public wearing no underwear beneath a sheer black gown.
In the image posted by West, Censori is seen completely naked aside from the bizarre fur cat mask, covering her breasts with one hand while making a clawing gesture with the other and roaring for the camera.
Earlier that evening, Censori had been pictured wearing yet another striking outfit, this time a sheer black dress with fur stripes running across the front that left her bare bottom exposed, with no bra or underwear underneath. She completed the look with the same black fuzzy cat mask. The pair were spotted at the Paragraph Golf & Spa Tabori, Autograph Collection, in Tbilisi, Georgia, where West, who now performs as Ye, is staging a sold-out stadium show at the Boris Paichadze Dinamo Arena as part of the government-backed Starring Georgia concert series, during his 2026 World Tour in support of his 18-track album BULLY.
The latest outfits add to a long-running pattern of provocative public appearances by Censori since she married West in 2022, including at last year’s Grammy Awards, where she arrived in a fur coat before revealing a sheer dress underneath that left little to the imagination.
In a Vanity Fair interview in February, Censori addressed the speculation surrounding her clothing directly, insisting West has never pressured her into appearing nude. “I wouldn’t be doing something I didn’t want to do,” she said, describing the process as a collaboration. “So it was like a collaboration, it was never ‘I was being told to do something.'” She added: “If you were married to Gianni Versace, wouldn’t he give you a dress or something?”
Censori, a former architect at West’s Yeezy brand, said she had long had “an obvious obsession with nudity” that came through in her work. “I was naked everywhere. I didn’t detach with it at any point. I consistently showed the same imagery over and over and over again. I live my artwork,” she said. She also said she was unconcerned by criticism framing her choices as attention-seeking rather than artistic. “I’ve never gone home and cried myself to sleep over anything anyone has said, because it interests me when the reaction is not the intention, because that’s just what lives within everybody,” she said. “I was explaining this to somebody once, and he said, ‘Well, your intention was lost.’ It’s okay that the intention was lost. It doesn’t matter. I was able to express myself. That’s all that mattered.”
