
New Delhi, February 23, 2026: In a whirlwind journey that reads like a modern-day fairy tale, Bhavitha Mandava has emerged as one of the most talked-about names in the global fashion industry. A 26-year-old architect-turned-model from Hyderabad, India, Mandava has shattered glass ceilings, becoming a symbol of South Asian representation on the world’s most prestigious runways.
Mandava’s path to the spotlight was anything but conventional. Raised in Hyderabad, she initially focused on a career in design, earning a Bachelor of Architecture from Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University (JNTU). Seeking to merge her design background with technology, she moved to the United States to pursue a Master’s degree in Integrated Design and Media at New York University (NYU).
Her life changed in October 2024 when she was scouted at a New York City subway station. Dressed in simple jeans and a tee, she caught the eye of a talent representative. This chance encounter led her to Matthieu Blazy, then the creative director of Bottega Veneta, who cast her as an exclusive model for his Spring/Summer 2025 show.
While her debut was impressive, it was her collaboration with the iconic French house Chanel that turned her into a household name. When Matthieu Blazy transitioned to Chanel as its new artistic director, Mandava followed.
In December 2025, she made history as the first Indian model to ever open a Chanel runway show. The event, the Métiers d’Art 2026 collection, was poetically staged in an abandoned Manhattan subway station—a full-circle moment for a woman discovered underground just a year prior.
The “Bhavitha phenomenon” is fueled by several key factors:
Mandava’s rise has sparked important conversations about diversity in luxury fashion. She has been vocal about the lack of South Asian faces in the industry, often noting that she is one of the few Brown models at major castings. By leading shows for brands like Chanel, Bottega Veneta, and Dior, she is opening doors for a new generation of talent from the subcontinent.
As she moves from the halls of NYU to the covers of international magazines, Bhavitha Mandava is proving that the distance between a subway platform and a Parisian runway is shorter than it seems—if you have the talent and the “natural presence” to bridge the gap.