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Scott Barnes’ Beauty Legacy Is Written in Light

From underpainting to Body Bling, his signature glow helped define a generation of celebrity glam.

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Scott Barnes applies lip color to a model wearing bold, colorful makeup during a studio beauty shoot.
This article first appeared in the Summer 2026 issue of NewBeauty. Click here to subscribe

Long before contouring went mainstream, Scott Barnes was already sculpting faces with light. The former photographer turned makeup artist drew inspo from Old Hollywood glamour of the 1930s and 1940s and created underpainting, the glow-from-within technique behind some of pop culture’s most iconic looks.

Muse Moment

“I was working with Paulina Porizkova before the JLo era—I was already doing this in fashion,” Barnes recalls. “That’s what made the magazines want me.” Then came Jennifer Lopez. “I met her at a party; she wasn’t JLo yet—just Jennifer.” The next day, she called: “‘It’s my album. I want Scott.’” That On the 6 shoot sparked a global glow revolution.

Glow Theory

“When I pared her down and made her buttery, monochromatic, glowing, she was nervous people wouldn’t respond,” he says. “Then the whole world was like, ‘We want this.’” Barnes credits Lopez’s clarity for her impact: “She was Jennifer, and people were going to get the real her whether they expected it or not.”

Icon Energy

“I worked on Beyoncé’s ‘Check On It,’” Barnes says. “It clinched Best R&B Video at the MTV VMAs. There have been so many career highs, and being part of each was mind-blowing.”

Getty Images / Shareif Ziyadat

New Era

“The first time I did Céline Dion’s makeup, she cried,” he says. “After years of pared-down, conservative looks, I gave her a full reinvention and a more modern, edgy look.”

Getty Images / Ethan Miller

Soft Focus

“When we met, Christina’s makeup was leaning a little harsh right after her Dirrty era,” Barnes says. “We got rid of the clumpy black mascara and transformed the grungy aesthetic into a refined look.” She then carried it into her The Voice era, where he softened her makeup using warm, golden tones and a radiant finish. “Under the aggressive styling, the core of a woman never changes.”

Getty Images / Jon Kopaloff

’Gram Worthy

In 2012, Kim Kardashian tweeted a before-and-after showcasing Barnes’s contour technique. “Kim pushed me to post my work online just as social media was taking off,” he recalls. The image of his underpainting method went viral. “Since then, plenty have tried to claim they created it, but the sculpted aesthetic’s real origin is all documented in my books.”

Body Glow

Backstage at MTV’s Spring Break ’99 Fashionably Loud, Barnes improvised a bronzed glow for bikini models using pigments, creams and shimmer, creating the first version of his now-iconic Body Bling Lotion ($45).

Scott Barnes Body Bling

Center Stage

“The biggest Jennifer moment? The Super Bowl because everyone was watching,” he says. More recently, for Kiss of the Spider Woman, he had to pivot. “They wanted her blonde, so I had to rethink everything, especially the brows. I glued them down and redrew them. There was no retouching, and the makeup had to stay flawless for 16 hours.”

Getty Images / Jeff Kravitz

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