From French avant, meaning “before” or “forward,” later adopted as a surname and given name.
Avant is a name that wears its artistic ambitions on its sleeve. From the Old French avant — meaning "before" or "in front" — it arrives in English most powerfully through the compound term avant-garde, the military metaphor adopted by nineteenth-century French critics to describe artists who scouted ahead of conventional taste into new aesthetic territory. To be avant-garde was to advance into risk, to be at the edge of what was accepted and to push past it.
As a given name, Avant carries all of that forward momentum — a name for someone expected to arrive early to the future. The name gained notable cultural currency through Avant, the R&B singer born Myron Lavell Ragan Jr. in 1978 in Cleveland, Ohio, whose smooth vocal style earned him a devoted following in the early 2000s.
His choice of the stage name — and its subsequent adoption as a given name by admiring families — demonstrates the living relationship between popular culture and naming practice, the way artists can breathe new life into words by wearing them as identity. As a given name, Avant is still rare enough to feel genuinely distinctive without being confusing. It carries connotations of sophistication, forward-thinking, and creative courage — a name with a built-in philosophy. In a culture increasingly attuned to naming as a form of intentional self-presentation, Avant offers parents the ability to embed an aspiration directly into a child's identity: be early, be ahead, be the one who gets there first.