(WOODLAWN – May 25, 2026) – When your name literally means “beauty and peace,” perhaps it was always destiny. For Maeion Bryant, Founder and Lead Artist of Maeion Beauty Collective, those two words aren’t just a personal identity — they’re a business philosophy, a mentorship mission, and a way of life that has touched thousands of lives across three decades.
Bryant is one of the honorees at this year’s Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards — WOODLAWN, and few people in Baltimore’s creative and business community are more deserving of that recognition.
Her career began on the West Coast, navigating the fashion and modeling worlds of Seattle and San Diego. When she relocated to the East Coast as a newly married mother, she faced a daunting challenge: rebuilding her professional network from scratch — and she did it the old-fashioned way, long before Instagram or TikTok made self-promotion easy. Through sheer discipline, relationship-building, and an unwavering standard of excellence, she carved out a name for herself across the Baltimore, Washington D.C., and Virginia corridors.
Today, the list of clients and productions that have trusted Maeion Bryant’s artistry reads like a who’s who of media, culture, and public affairs. Her work spans campaigns and projects for PBS NewsHour, Toyota, WETA, BET News, MedStar, Al Jazeera America Tonight, and the Maryland gubernatorial campaign for Gov. Wes Moore. Her celebrity roster includes Aretha Franklin, Alice Walker, Misty Copeland, Danny Glover, Tamika Mallory, Gloria Steinem, Nicole Ari Parker, and filmmaker Ava DuVernay — a testament to the trust that some of the world’s most high-profile figures place in her hands.
But Bryant’s impact runs deeper than a celebrity client list.
In 2016, she and her husband, Lou Bryant, custom-designed a fully equipped mobile beauty studio — a first-of-its-kind luxury experience that brought premium beauty services directly to clients at weddings, festivals, reunions, and special events. It was innovation born from listening. When her clients kept saying they wished beauty services would come to them, she made it happen.
The rebranding of her business from Maeion Beauty & Company to Maeion Beauty Collective signals an evolution that’s about more than aesthetics. The new name reflects her expanding mission: collaboration, mentorship, and building community among women in the beauty industry.
That community investment is where Bryant’s story becomes truly compelling. She created “Boss in Training,” a mentorship initiative guiding aspiring beauty professionals toward confidence and purpose-driven careers. She has volunteered with Job Corps, produced fundraising fashion shows, launched a six-week summer sewing enrichment program for girls ages 12–14, partnered with the Casey Cares Foundation, collaborated with the Department of Social Services on girls’ empowerment camps, and currently volunteers with Threads, supporting Baltimore City students as they transition from high school into young adulthood.
Bryant credits much of her business foundation to her former modeling agent and mentor, Teresa “Frankie” Williams, who instilled in her the timeless principles of professionalism, preparation, integrity, and protecting the value of your name. Those lessons are still alive in everything Maeion Beauty Collective does today.
Clients often describe their experience with Bryant not just as a beauty appointment, but as a transformation — calming, centering, empowering. Her reputation for a “Zen-like” presence is as much a part of her brand as the flawless work itself.
Thirty-plus years in, Maeion Bryant is still redefining what beauty means — not as a surface-level pursuit, but as an experience rooted in confidence, empowerment, and peace.
To learn more or book services, visit www.Maeion.com, email info@Maeion.com, or call 443.851.0843.
RSVP for Black Wall Street Awards — WOODLAWN at blackwallstreetwoodlawn.eventbrite.com.
Doni Glover is the founder and publisher of BMORENews.com, now in its 24th year of covering Black Baltimore, and the founder of the Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards, now in its 15th year. He is also the host of the Emmy-nominated Doni Glover podcast and The Doni Glover Show on WMAR-TV 2.

