Julia Fox flashed her washboard abs and underboob covered in scaly-looking indents after she fell asleep wearing a knitted dress on Thursday.
The actress, 33, had earlier shared a 30-second clip on Instagram of her dressed up as the Statue of Liberty before a King Kong Magazine photoshoot.
She looked nothing short of sensational as she donned a floor-length, cream, knitted dress which trailed along the grubby floor of New York.
The frock featured a fitted corset and exaggerated hip pads accentuating her envious figure.
Julia paired the delicate garment with a wild, curly, urban wig, which she accessorized with a yellow headpiece bearing seven spikes – referencing the Statue of Liberty’s crown.
The model pouted at the camera as she shared a video with her 1.5million social media followers.
Julia was later pictured by the magazine in the ensemble while painted head to toe in pale blue.
It comes after she slammed being reduced to a ‘sexual object’ as she posed topless in stunning shots for the December/January cover of Cosmopolitan.
She told how women’s bodies should be celebrated and that she has been ‘slapped with the label’ of being a ‘sexual being’, before quipping: ‘sex is the last f**king thing I do with this body.’
She put on a racy display in sheer black tights with fur detailing for the accompanying shoot as she posed up a storm.
Julia said: ‘Women’s bodies should be celebrated and shouldn’t just be viewed as sexual objects. Anyone getting mad at me for showing a lot of skin has slapped this label on me as a sexual being.
‘But I’m so much more than that – and sex is the last f**king thing I do with this body. I’m proud of my body. Why wouldn’t I wear something revealing, really cool and artsy? Why choose to interpret my body as a sexual object?’
She also touched on how she wants to use her early encounters with men to help the young women of today.
The beauty – who just released her memoir Down the Drain – said her experiences were ‘tough to look back at’ and that now she understands that she was a ‘victim’.
Julia explained: ‘My early encounters with men are tough to look back at. Same s**t, different face… I have an understanding now that I was a victim, but feeling like a victim never feels good.
‘It doesn’t feel empowering. It felt very vulnerable…but in writing about it, I would just power through – I couldn’t stop – knowing that I’m not unique in those experiences that so many women go through.
‘I’m speaking and writing with young women today in mind. I want my overall message to be that you can always change your life. Decide you want to do this very thing now, or decide you don’t want to do that any more – it’s never too late to turn it around.’
James Parker is a UK-based entertainment aficionado who delves into the glitz and glamour of the entertainment industry. From Hollywood to the West End, he offers readers an insider’s perspective on the world of movies, music, and pop culture.