Rihanna touched down in Mumbai this week to launch the Fenty Beauty Ki Haveli, an immersive pop-up experience stationed at Phoenix Palladium and open to the public through May 4. The activation marks her first return to India since she performed at Anant Ambani and Radhika Merchant’s pre-wedding festivities in Jamnagar in 2024, and the scale of the event made clear this was not a routine brand appearance.
The space is built around color and sensory experience in equal measure, functioning as both a retail environment and a visual statement. Visitors can shop the new Shake ‘N Play Buildable Liquid Blushes, which are available in five shades, alongside the Diamond Bomb All-Over Highlighter. Rihanna also selected a dedicated lineup of products exclusively for the Indian market, a detail that signals genuine investment in the region rather than a standard international rollout.
What drives Fenty Beauty
In a recent conversation with Vogue India, Rihanna outlined the philosophy that has shaped the brand since its 2017 launch. Her central argument was that women want to be seen in a substantive way. They want their ideas to carry weight, their voices to register, and their contributions to be taken seriously. That conviction informed the brand’s founding decision to launch with 40 foundation shades, a move that immediately exposed how narrow the industry’s existing standard had been.
She also spoke about beauty as a vehicle for community. Watching her children grow, she said, reinforced for her that life across all circumstances requires support, and that perspective has shaped how Fenty operates beyond what it simply sells.
A brand built on inclusion and scale
The commercial results behind Fenty Beauty reflect the impact of that founding approach. By August 2021, Forbes estimated Rihanna’s net worth at $1.7 billion, with her cosmetics line contributing significantly to that figure. The brand’s commitment to shade range and skin-type inclusivity built a loyal consumer base while simultaneously raising expectations across the broader industry. Products and coverage that once passed as adequate no longer measured up once Fenty established a new reference point.
Rihanna in the room
What distinguished the Mumbai activation from a standard product launch was Rihanna’s active presence within it. She did not occupy a position at a distance from the crowd. Attendees described her moving through the space, holding real conversations, and allowing interactions to extend past whatever timeline had been set. In one notable exchange, a guest who was struggling to identify a matching foundation shade received personal attention from Rihanna directly, followed by a joke delivered with enough conviction to make it land.
The Fenty model in practice
That moment reflects something the brand has maintained consistently since its launch. Fenty Beauty is a company where the founder remains genuinely present, not as a symbolic figurehead but as a participant. The Ki Haveli pop-up gave attendees access to both the products and the person behind them, a dynamic that has become increasingly uncommon in the beauty industry as brands scale.
The audience Fenty has built over nearly a decade treats the brand less like a corporate entity and more like an ongoing exchange. For Rihanna, that relationship has always been the point.

