Beyoncé put on a bold display in her latest jaw-dropping Instagram post on Sunday.
The 42-year-old singer showed off her pert derriere as she modeled a bottom-baring, thong bodysuit with a pair of cheeky leather chaps.
She teamed with her monochromatic, gray ensemble she wore a faux fur coat with a matching infinity scarf.
As she continues to celebrate the release of her country album Cowboy Carter, she wore a taupe cowboy hat over her honey blonde tresses, which she tied in a low bun.
The 32-time Grammy winner — whose name was recently added to an updated version of the French dictionary — added a fun pop of color to her look with a bright red lipstick.
For an additional touch of glamour, she wore silver, statement earrings and a pair of circular aviator sunglᴀsses.
In one pH๏τo, the Texas Hold ‘Em hitmaker threw up her hands to symbolize finger guns.
She also shared a close-up snap of one of her hands posed in the same way to showcase her stunning diamond ring and her Texas flag-inspired French manicure.
The superstar — who shared a slideshow with pH๏τos from her and her husband Jay-Z’s recent trip to Japan earlier in the week — also shared a pH๏τo of herself facing away from the camera to showcase her backside in the low-back bodysuit.
Nearly all of her looks she’s worn as of late has had a bit of Western flair to go with the theme of her genre-bending country album.
Just several weeks earlier, Beyoncé released Act II: Cowboy Carter on March 29.
At the time of the drop and dedicated to her Texas roots, she called her eighth studio album the ‘best album’ she has ever made.
‘The joy of creating music is that there are no rules,’ she said in a press release shared.
In one pH๏τo, the Texas Hold ‘Em hitmaker threw up her hands to symbolize finger guns. She also shared a close-up snap of one of her hands posed in the same way to showcase her stunning diamond ring and her Texas flag-inspired French manicure
As previously reported, Cowboy Carter debuted at No. 1 on the all-genre Billboard 200 — marking her eighth chart-topping release.
She also topped the Top Country Albums and Americana/Folk Albums charts with 407,000 equivalent album units earned in the United States during its first week.
She made history as the album made her the first Black woman to have a number one country album.