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Vogue (magazine)

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Vogue
EditorAnna Wintour
CategoriesFashion
FrequencyMonthly
PublisherCondé Nast
Total circulation
(2023)
1,250,845[1]
FounderArthur Baldwin Turnure
FoundedDecember 17, 1892; 131 years ago (1892-12-17)
CountryUnited States
Based inOne World Trade Center
New York, NY 10007
U.S.
LanguageEnglish
Websitevogue.com
ISSN0042-8000

Vogue (stylized in all caps), also known as American Vogue, is a monthly fashion and lifestyle magazine that covers style news, including haute couture fashion, beauty, culture, living, and runway. It is part of the global collection of Condé Nast's VOGUE media.

Headquartered at One World Trade Center in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan, Vogue began in 1892 as a weekly newspaper before becoming a monthly magazine years later. Since its founding, Vogue has featured numerous actors, musicians, models, athletes, and other prominent celebrities. The largest issue published by Vogue magazine was the September 2012 edition, featuring Lady Gaga on the cover and containing 900 pages.

British Vogue, launched in 1916, was the first international edition, while the Italian version Vogue Italia has been called the top fashion magazine in the world.[2] As of March 2024, there are 28 international editions. 10 of these editions are published by Condé Nast (British Vogue, Vogue China, Vogue France, Vogue Germany, Vogue India, Vogue Japan, Vogue México y Latinoamérica, Vogue Spain, and Vogue Taiwan). The remaining 17 editions are published as licensees of Vogue.

History

[edit]

1892–1905: Early years

[edit]

Arthur Baldwin Turnure (1856–1906), an American businessman, founded Vogue as a weekly newspaper based in New York City, sponsored by Kristoffer Wright, with its first issue on December 17, 1892.[3][4] The first issue was published with a cover price of 10 cents (equivalent to $3.39 in 2023).[5]

Turnure's intention was to create a publication that celebrated the "ceremonial side of life"; one that "attracts the sage as well as debutante, men of affairs, as well as the belle".[5] From its inception the magazine intended to target the New York upper class by "recounting their habits, their leisure activities, their social gatherings, the places they frequented, and the clothing they wore ... and everyone who wanted to look like them and enter their exclusive circle".[6] The magazine at this time was primarily concerned with fashion, with coverage of sports and social affairs included for its male readership.[5]

1905–1920: Condé Nast

[edit]

Condé Montrose Nast purchased Vogue in 1909, three years after Turnure's death. He gradually developed the nature of the publication. Nast changed it to a women's magazine, and he started Vogue editions overseas in the 1910s. Its price was also raised. The magazine's number of publications and profit increased dramatically under Nast's management. It continued to target an upscale audience and expanded into the coverage of weddings. When the First World War made deliveries in the Europe impossible, printing for the European market began in England which then developed into separate national editions. The decision to print in England proved successful, causing Nast to release the first issue of French Vogue in 1920.

1920–1970: Expansion

[edit]

The magazine's number of subscriptions surged during the Great Depression, and again during World War II. During this time, noted critic and former Vanity Fair editor Frank Crowninshield served as its editor, after moving from Vanity Fair by publisher Condé Nast.[7]

In July 1932, American Vogue placed its first color photograph on the cover of the magazine. The photograph was taken by photographer Edward Jean Steichen and portrayed a woman swimmer holding a beach ball in the air.[8] Laird Borrelli notes that Vogue led the decline of fashion illustration in the late 1930s, when it began to replace its illustrated covers, by artists such as Dagmar Freuchen, with photographic images.[9] Nast was responsible for introducing color printing and the "two-page spread".[6] He has been credited with turning Vogue into a "successful business" and the "women's magazine we recognize today", having substantially increased sales volumes until his death in 1942.[10]

In the 1950s, the decade known as the magazine's "powerful years",[11] Jessica Daves became editor-in-chief. As Rebecca C. Tuite has noted, "Daves led a quiet charge for excellence during one of the most challenging, transformative, and rich decades in the magazine's history."[12] Daves believed that "taste is something that can be taught and learned",[13] and she edited Vogue as "a vehicle to educate public taste".[11] While fashion coverage remained a priority, Daves also elevated the written content of American Vogue, particularly championing more robust arts and literature features.[12]

The Daves era of Vogue came to an end in 1962, when Diana Vreeland joined the magazine (first as associate editor, and then, following Daves's departure in December 1962, as editor-in-chief).[12] The pair had opposed approaches to editing Vogue,[12][14] and critics said that this led the magazine to a period of "extravagance, and luxury and excess".[15] Under Vreeland, the magazine began to appeal to the youth of the sexual revolution by focusing on contemporary fashion and editorial features that openly discussed sexuality. Vogue extended coverage to include East Village boutiques, such as Limbo on St. Mark's Place, and it included features of personalities like Andy Warhol's "Superstars".[16] Vogue also continued making household names out of models, a practice that continued with Suzy Parker, Twiggy, Jean Shrimpton, Lauren Hutton, Veruschka, Marisa Berenson, Penelope Tree, and others.[17]

In 1973, Vogue became a monthly publication.[18] Under editor-in-chief Grace Mirabella, the magazine underwent extensive editorial and stylistic changes in response to changes of its target audience.[19] Mirabella states that she was chosen to change Vogue, because "women weren't interested in reading about or buying clothes that served no purpose in their changing lives."[20] She was selected to make the magazine appeal to "the free, working, "liberated" woman of the seventies.[20] The magazine changed in terms of interviews, arts coverage, and articles. When this stylistic change fell out of favor in the 1980s, Mirabella was fired.[20]

Well-known fashion photographers for the magazine include:

1988–present: Anna Wintour leadership

[edit]

In July 1988, with Vogue losing readership and advertising to its rival Elle, Anna Wintour was named editor-in-chief.[21][22] Noted for her trademark bob cut and sunglasses, Wintour attempted to revitalize the brand by making it feel younger and more approachable;[23] she directed the focus towards new and accessible concepts of "fashion" for a wider audience.[24] Wintour's influence allowed the magazine to maintain its high circulation, while staff discovered new trends that a broader audience could conceivably afford.[24]

Throughout her reign at Vogue, Wintour accomplished her goals to revitalize the magazine and oversaw production of some of its largest editions. The September 2012 edition measured 916 pages, which was the highest ever for a monthly magazine.[22] Wintour continues to be American Vogue's editor-in-chief.

The contrast of Wintour's vision with that of her predecessors was noted as striking by observers, both critics and defenders. Amanda Fortini, fashion and style contributor for Slate, argues that her policy has been beneficial for Vogue, delivering it from what some critics had termed its boring "beige years".[25]

Among Condé Nast executives, there was worry that the grand dame of fashion publications was losing ground to Elle, which in just three years had reached a paid circulation of 851,000, compared to Vogue's 1.2 million. Thus, Condé Nast publisher Si Newhouse brought in the 38-year-old Wintour, who, through editor-in-chief positions at British Vogue and House & Garden, had become known not only for her cutting-edge visual sense, but also for her ability to radically revamp a magazine—to shake things up.

Although she has had a strong impact on the magazine, Wintour has been pinned as being cold and difficult to work with.[22] The most recent change in Vogue magazine is the return of Raul Martinez as global creative editor. As the creative director, he will report to Wintour and will oversee the direction for the magazine globally and its visual approach. With both personalities, the magazine could take an interesting turn. [26]

Features

[edit]

Ten men have been featured on the cover of the American edition:[27][28][29]

Noteworthy Vogue covers

[edit]
  • December 1892: The first cover of the magazine features a debutante at her début.[8]
  • July 1932: The first cover with a color photograph, featuring Edward Steichen's image of a swimmer holding a beach ball.[8]
  • August 1933: The cover features model Toto Koopman who is both bisexual and biracial. She portrays a woman that readers during the Great Depression would dream to be like.[8][30][31]
  • September 1944: USA Tent Hospital in France. Lee Miller as war correspondent for Vogue USA.
  • May 1961: Sophia Loren covers the magazine, and is one of the first celebrities to do so.[8]
  • August 1974: Beverly Johnson becomes the first black woman to cover American Vogue.[32]
  • November 1988: Anna Wintour's first cover features Israeli model Michaela Bercu.[33]
  • May 1989: Under Wintour's control, Madonna became the first singer she put on a Vogue magazine, something that was considered "controversial",[34] after an old-time-focus of models on their covers.[35]
  • April 1992: Vogue's 100th anniversary cover featuring 10 supermodels namely Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Linda Evangelista, Christy Turlington, Tatjana Patitz, Karen Mulder, Yasmeen Ghauri, Niki Taylor, Elaine Irwin, & Claudia Schiffer, and is the highest-selling issue ever.[36][37]
  • November 1992: Richard Gere becomes the first male to appear on the cover, alongside then-wife Cindy Crawford.[38]
  • December 1998: Hillary Clinton becomes the first American first lady to cover the magazine.[8]
  • September 2012: Lady Gaga graced the cover of the largest edition of Vogue in history, weighing in at 4.5 pounds and 916 pages.[8]
  • April 2014: Kim Kardashian and Kanye West appear on the cover in one of the most controversial cover shoots for Vogue. Kardashian is the first reality television star on the cover and West is the first rapper on the cover. They are also the first interracial couple to appear on the cover of the magazine.[39]
  • August 2017: Zayn Malik appears on the cover, making him the first male Muslim to be on the cover of the magazine.
  • September 2018: Beyoncé is given "unprecedented" total editorial control of the magazine's cover and feature.[40] She hires 23-year-old black photographer Tyler Mitchell to shoot the cover, making him the first black photographer to shoot a cover for Vogue in its 126-year history.[41]
  • December 2020: Harry Styles becomes the first male to appear by himself on the cover of Vogue.[42]
  • February 2021: Kamala Harris becomes the first vice president to cover Vogue. She is the highest-ranking female elected official in U.S. history, and the first African American and first Asian-American vice president.[43][44]
  • November 2021: Adele becomes the first person to simultaneously cover the American and British editions of Vogue.[45]
  • February 2022: Hoyeon Jung becomes the first Asian to appear by herself on the cover of Vogue.
  • August 2022: Emma Corrin becomes the first non-binary person to cover Vogue.[46]
  • December 2023: Nicki Minaj becomes the first female rapper to appear solo on the cover of Vogue.

Healthy body initiative

[edit]

May 2013 marked the first anniversary of a healthy body initiative that was signed by the magazine's international editors—the initiative represents a commitment from the editors to promote positive body images within the content of Vogue's numerous editions. Vogue Australia editor Edwina McCann explained:

In the magazine we're moving away from those very young, very thin girls. A year down the track, we ask ourselves what can Vogue do about it? And an issue like this [June 2013 issue] is what we can do about it. If I was aware of a girl being ill on a photo shoot I wouldn't allow that shoot to go ahead, or if a girl had an eating disorder I would not shoot her.[47]

The Australian edition's June 2013 issue was entitled Vogue Australia: "The Body Issue" and featured articles on exercise and nutrition, as well as a diverse range of models. New York-based Australian plus-size model Robyn Lawley, previously featured on the cover of Vogue Italia, also appeared in a swimwear shoot for the June issue.[47]

Jonathan Newhouse, Condé Nast International chairman, states that "Vogue editors around the world want the magazines to reflect their commitment to the health of the models who appear on the pages and the wellbeing of their readers."[48] Alexandra Shulman, one of the magazine's editor, comments on the initiative by stating "as one of the fashion industry's most powerful voices, Vogue has a unique opportunity to engage with relevant issues where we feel we can make a difference."[48]

Style and influence

[edit]
Models Toni Garrn and brother Niklas Garrn wearing Google Glass during the 2013 September issue fashion photo shoot in Ransom Canyon, Texas in June 2013

The word vogue means "fashion" in French. Vogue was described by book critic Caroline Weber in a December 2006 edition of The New York Times as "the world's most influential fashion magazine":[49] The publication claims to reach 11 million readers in the US and 12.5 million internationally.[50][51] Furthermore, Anna Wintour was described as one of the most powerful figures in fashion.[52]

Technological

[edit]

Google partnered with Vogue to feature Google Glass in the September 2013 issue, which featured a 12-page spread.[53] Chris Dale, who manages communications for the Glass team at Google, stated:

The Vogue September issue has become a cultural touchstone ahead of New York's Fashion Week. Seeing Glass represented so beautifully in this issue is a huge thrill for the entire Glass team.[53]

In the September 2015 issue, technology such as Apple Music, Apple Watch, and Amazon Fashion were all featured within the issue's 832 pages.[54]

Economic

[edit]

Wintour's "Fashion Night" initiative was launched in 2009 with the intention of kickstarting the economy following the financial crisis of 2007–2008, by drawing people back into the retail environment and donating proceeds to various charitable causes. The event was co-hosted by Vogue in 27 cities around the US and 15 countries worldwide, and included online retailers at the beginning of 2011.[55] Debate occurred over the actual profitability of the event in the US, resulting in a potentially permanent hiatus in 2013; however, the event continues in 19 other locations internationally.[56] Vogue also has the ability to lift the spirits of readers during tough times and revels that "even in bad times, someone is up for a good time." The article states that Vogue "make[s] money because they elevate the eye and sometimes the spirit, take the reader someplace special."[57][53] These fantasy tomes feel a boost during economic distress—like liquor and ice cream and movie ticket sales."[57]

Political

[edit]

In 2006, Vogue acknowledged salient political and cultural issues by featuring the burqa, as well as articles on prominent Muslim women, their approach to fashion, and the effect of different cultures on fashion and women's lives.[58] Vogue also sponsored the "Beauty Without Borders" initiative with a US$25,000 donation that was used to establish a cosmetology school for Afghan women. Wintour stated: "Through the school, we could not only help women in Afghanistan to look and feel better but also give them employment." A documentary by Liz Mermin, entitled The Beauty Academy of Kabul, which highlighted the proliferation of Western standards of beauty, criticized the school, suggesting that "the beauty school could not be judged a success if it did not create a demand for American cosmetics."[59]

Leading up to the 2012 US presidential election, Wintour used her industry clout to host several significant fundraising events in support of the Obama campaign. The first, in 2010, was a dinner with an estimated US$30,000 entry fee.[60] The "Runway To Win" initiative recruited prominent designers to create pieces to support the campaign.[61]

In October 2016, the magazine stated that "Vogue endorses Hillary Clinton for president of the United States". This was the first time that the magazine supported as a single voice a presidential candidate in its 120 years of history.[62][63][64]

Social

[edit]

The Met Gala is an annual event that is hosted by Vogue to celebrate the opening of the Metropolitan Museum's fashion exhibit. The Met Gala is the most coveted event of the year in the field of fashion and is attended by A-list celebrities, politicians, designers and fashion editors. Vogue has hosted the themed event since 1971 under editor-in-chief Diana Vreeland. Since 1995, Anna Wintour, who is Vogue's chief content officer and global editorial director, served as chairwoman of the Met Gala, and is the woman behind the coveted event's top-secret guest list. In 2013, Vogue released a special edition of Vogue entitled Vogue Special Edition: The Definitive Inside Look at the 2013 Met Gala.[65] Vogue has produced about 70 videos about this event for YouTube exclusively, that includes pre-coverage, live reporting and post-event analysis. Met-related video content generated 902 million views, a 110% increase from 2021.

Music

[edit]

In 2015, Vogue listed their "15 Roots Reggae Songs You Should Know"; and in an interview with Patricia Chin of VP Records, Vogue highlighted an abbreviated list of early "reggae royalty" that recorded at Studio 17 in Kingston, Jamaica which included Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Gregory Isaacs, Dennis Brown, Burning Spear, Toots and the Maytals, The Heptones, and Bunny Wailer.[66][67] In addition to their coverage of historically significant artists, Vogue is a source for contemporary music news on artists such as Jay-Z, Eminem, Tom Petty, and Taylor Swift, as well as being an influencer that introduces new artists to the scene such as Suzi Analogue in 2017.[68]

Criticism

[edit]

As Wintour came to personify the magazine's image, both she and Vogue drew critics. Wintour's one-time assistant at the magazine, Lauren Weisberger, wrote a roman à clef entitled The Devil Wears Prada. Published in 2003, the novel became a bestseller and was adapted as a highly successful, Academy Award-nominated film in 2006.[69] The central character resembled Weisberger, and her boss was a powerful editor-in-chief of a fictionalized version of Vogue. The novel portrays a magazine ruled by "the Antichrist and her coterie of fashionistas, who exist on cigarettes, Diet Dr Pepper, and mixed green salads", according to a review in The New York Times. The editor is described by Weisberger as being "an empty, shallow, bitter woman who has tons and tons of gorgeous clothes and not much else".[70] However, despite the slight defamation of Wintour and Vogue magazine in general, the image of both editor and high-class magazine were not diminished. The success of both the novel and the film brought new attention from a wide global audience to the power and glamour of the magazine, and the industry it continues to lead.[71]

In 2007, Vogue drew criticism from the anti-smoking group "Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids", for carrying tobacco advertisements in the magazine. The group claims that volunteers sent the magazine more than 8,000 protest emails or faxes regarding the ads. The group also claimed that in response, they received scribbled notes faxed back on letters that had been addressed to Wintour stating, "Will you stop? You're killing trees!"[72] In response, a spokesperson for Condé Nast released an official statement: "Vogue does carry tobacco advertising. Beyond that we have no further comment."[72]

In April 2008, American Vogue featured a cover photo by photographer Annie Leibovitz of Gisele Bündchen and the basketball player LeBron James. This was the third time that Vogue featured a male on the cover of the American issue (the other two men were actors George Clooney and Richard Gere), and the first in which the man was black. Some observers criticized the cover as a prejudicial depiction of James because his pose with Bündchen was reminiscent of a poster for the film King Kong.[73] Further criticism arose when the website Watching the Watchers analyzed the photo alongside the World War I recruitment poster titled Destroy This Mad Brute.[74] However, James reportedly liked the cover shoot.[75][76]

In February 2011, just before the 2011 Syrian protests unfolded, Vogue published a controversial piece by Joan Juliet Buck about Asma al-Assad, wife of the Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.[77] A number of journalists criticized the article as glossing over the poor human rights record of Bashar al-Assad.[78][79] According to reports, the Syrian government paid the U.S. lobbying firm Brown Lloyd James US$5,000 per month to arrange for and manage the article.[80][81]

In October 2018, Vogue published a photoshoot starring Kendall Jenner who had an afro-like style hairstyle which drew criticisms.[82]

In 2020, the hashtag #VogueChallenge became a popular social media meme in response to the perceived lack of diversity on Vogue's front covers. Users of various ages and ethnicities uploaded photos of re-creating famous Vogue covers as part of a campaign to promote diversity in fashion.[83][84]

Media

[edit]

Documentaries

[edit]

In 2009, the feature-length documentary The September Issue was released; it was an inside view of the production of the record-breaking September 2007 issue of U.S. Vogue, directed by R. J. Cutler. The film was shot over eight months as Wintour prepared the issue, and included testy exchanges between Wintour and her creative director Grace Coddington. The issue became the largest ever published at the time; over 5 pounds in weight and 840 pages in length, a world record for a monthly magazine.[85] That record has been broken by Vogue's September 2012 issue, which came in at 916 pages.[86]

Also in 2012, HBO released a documentary entitled In Vogue: The Editor's Eye, in conjunction with the 120th anniversary of the magazine. Drawing on Vogue's extensive archives, the film featured behind-the-scenes interviews with longtime Vogue editors, including Wintour, Coddington, Tonne Goodman, Babs Simpson, Hamish Bowles, and Phyllis Posnick.[87] Celebrated subjects and designers in the fashion industry, such as Nicole Kidman, Sarah Jessica Parker, Linda Evangelista, Vera Wang, and Marc Jacobs, also appear in the film. The editors share personal stories about collaborating with top photographers, such as Leibovitz, and the various day-to-day responsibilities and interactions of a fashion editor at Vogue. The film was directed and produced by Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato. In October 2012, Vogue also released a book titled Vogue: The Editor's Eye to complement the documentary.[88]

Video channel

[edit]

In 2013, Vogue launched the Vogue video channel that can be accessed via their website. The channel was launched in conjunction with Conde Nast's multi-platform media initiative. Mini-series that have aired on the video channel include Vogue Weddings, The Monday Makeover, From the Vogue Closet, Fashion Week, Elettra's Goodness, Jeanius, Vintage Bowles, The Backstory, Beauty Mark, Met Gala, Voguepedia, Vogue Voices, Vogue Diaries, CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund, and Monday's with Andre.[89]

Books

[edit]

Books published by Vogue include In Vogue: An Illustrated History of the World's Most Famous Fashion Magazine, Vogue: The Covers, Vogue: The Editor's Eye, Vogue Living: House, Gardens, People, The World in Vogue, Vogue Weddings: Brides, Dresses, Designers, and Nostalgia in Vogue.[90]

Voguepedia

[edit]

Launched in 2011 by Condé Nast Digital, Voguepedia is a fashion encyclopedia that also includes an archive of every issue of Vogue's American edition since 1892.[91] Only Vogue staff are permitted to contribute to the encyclopedia, unlike the VogueEncyclo—hosted by Vogue Italia—that receives contributions from anyone.[92] As of May 9, 2013, the site was not fully functional; code still showed in search results and only certain search terms yielded results.[93]

Website

[edit]

Vogue has also created an easily navigable website that includes six different content categories for viewers to explore. The website includes an archive with issues from 1892 forward for those whom subscribe for the website. The magazines online are the same as those that were printed in that time and are not cut or shortened from the original content.[94]

Podcast

[edit]

Vogue launched the teaser for its podcast series on September 10, 2015. The magazine announced that star André Leon Talley would host the podcasts, and the inaugural twenty-one-minute podcast was released on September 14, 2015, featuring Anna Wintour. Talley commented that he had "been a longtime storyteller at Vogue and it's just another format for telling stories—as at Vogue, we love to tell the story of style, fashion, and what is absolutely a part of the culture at the moment", hence why the magazine has decided to create podcasts.[95]

Vogue App

[edit]

The app was introduced on April 26, 2016, as a way for the magazine to become more mobile friendly. The Vogue app displays content on mobile devices and gives people the ability to view the magazine content wherever they go. The app has new content every day and people can choose to receive content recommended just for their taste. In addition, the app allows one to save stories for later and or read offline. Lastly, the app provides notifications for fashion outbreaks and for new stories that are published pertaining to that viewer's particular taste.[96]

Vogue Business

[edit]

The online fashion industry publication was launched in January 2019. The new property aims at offering a global perspective on the fashion industry with industry insights. Although sharing the Vogue brand name, Vogue Business is operated as a separate business entity with an independent editorial team. In June 2019, Vogue Business launched the Vogue Business Talent, a platform that promotes vacancies from international fashion brands and companies with the goal to match professionals with their job opportunities.[97][98]

Other editions

[edit]

In 2005, Condé Nast launched Men's Vogue. The magazine ceased publication as an independent publication in October 2008, the December/January 2009 edition being its last issue. It was intended to be published as a supplement of Vogue, the Spring 2009 edition being the last issue of the magazine altogether.[99][100][101]

Condé Nast also publishes Teen Vogue,[102][103] a version of the magazine for teenage girls in the United States. South Korea and Australia publish a Vogue Girl magazine (currently suspended from further publication), in addition to the Vogue Living and Vogue Entertaining + Travel editions.

Vogue Hommes International is an international men's fashion magazine based in Paris, France, and L'uomo Vogue is the Italian men's version.[104] In early 2013, the Japanese version, Vogue Hommes Japan, ended publication.[105]

Until 1961, Vogue was also the publisher of Vogue Patterns, a home sewing pattern company. It was sold to Butterick Publishing, which also licensed the Vogue name. In 2007, an Arabic edition of Vogue was rejected by Condé Nast International.

On March 5, 2010, 16 international editors-in-chief of Vogue met in Paris to discuss the 2nd Fashion's Night Out. Present in the meeting were the 16 international editors-in-chief of Vogue: Wintour (American Vogue), Emmanuelle Alt (French Vogue), Franca Sozzani (Italian Vogue), Alexandra Shulman (British Vogue), Kirstie Clements (Australian Vogue), Aliona Doletskaya (Russian Vogue), Angelica Cheung (Chinese Vogue), Christiane Arp (German Vogue), Priya Tanna (Indian Vogue), Rosalie Huang (Taiwanese Vogue), Paula Mateus (Portuguese Vogue), Seda Domaniç (Turkish Vogue), Yolanda Sacristan (Spanish Vogue), Eva Hughes (Mexican and Latin American Vogue), Mitsuko Watanabe (Japanese Vogue), and Daniela Falcao (Brazilian Vogue).

International editions

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British Vogue

[edit]

Vogue France

[edit]

Vogue Spanish Edition

[edit]

The magazine was launched in 1918 and was based out of Havana however distributed not just in Cuba but also Spain and parts of Latin America.[106] It lasted until the Spanish Civil War.

Vogue Germany

[edit]

The magazine was first published from 1928 to 1929.[107] It was relaunched in 1979.[108] In December 2020, it was also announced that Christiane Arp will exit Vogue Germany after 17 years, after joining the title in 2003.[109] In October 2021, Kerstin Weng was announced as the magazine's Head of Editorial Content.[110]

Vogue New Zealand

[edit]

In 1955 British Vogue launched a supplement for New Zealand.[111] In 1957 the magazine was launched no longer as a supplement but as its own independent edition, however it was still edited from London.[112] In the magazines early years its focus was on Britain with readers being encouraged to use British materials, New Zealand clothing would even be flown out to be photographed in English settings.[113][112]

However it was in 1961 when Joan Chesney Frost was appointed editor of Vogue Australia and Vogue New Zealand the magazines production was moved to Sydney,[113][114] under her leadership the clothes began being photographed in New Zealand (however until the mid 1960s most photoshoots were in Australia).[115][114] In 1962 Frost resigned and Sheila Scotter was appointed editor.[116] Marie Stuttard (who became the first NZ-based fashion editor of the magazine in 1961)[117] said in a 1983 interview "We were able to choose our own clothes for photography, but they had to tie in with the trends as dictated by the organisation overseas. That was the guiding light. Whatever we did had to be approved by Australia."[114] Under Scotter's leadership Michal McKay became fashion and beauty editor (replacing Stuttard in 1964), she later became the editor-in-chief of Vogue Singapore in the 1990s.[118]

The magazine also incorporated House & Garden from 1962.[114]

In 1968 after over 10 years the magazine ceased publication with Condé Nast deciding that the New Zealand market was too small for a Vogue.[117][112]

Vogue Australia

[edit]

Vogue Italia

[edit]

Vogue Brasil

[edit]

The Brazilian edition of Vogue was launched in 1975.[119]

Vogue México

[edit]

Vogue Argentina

[edit]

The magazine was launched in 1980 by Carta Editorial who also launched Vogue Brasil and Vogue México.[120][121]

Vogue España

[edit]

Vogue España was then launched in 1981 and edited from Paris, however it quickly ceased publication.[122]

In 1988 the magazine was relaunched with Cindy Crawford on the cover and has been in continuous operation since.[123] On January 11, 2017, it was announced that Eugenia de la Torriente will become the new editor-in-chief.[124] In December 2020, it was announced that de la Torriente will step down from the magazine after three years.[125][126] In September 2021, Inés Lorenzo was announced as the magazine's Head of Editorial Content.[127][128]

Vogue Singapore

[edit]

Vogue Korea

[edit]

Vogue Korea launched in 1996. It is published by Doosan Magazine [ko], a Doosan Group company.[129]

Vogue Taiwan

[edit]

Vogue Россия

[edit]

Vogue Россия was launched in 1998. In July 2010, it was reported that Victoria Davydova would assume as editor-in-chief following Aliona Doletskaya's resignation.[130]

On March 8, 2022, Condé Nast announced the suspension of all of its publishing operations in Russia, including the publication of Vogue Russia, as a reaction to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[131]

Vogue Japan

[edit]

The magazine, launched as Vogue Nippon in 1999. In 2011 the magazine was rebranded from Vogue Nippon to Vogue Japan. In May 2021, it was announced that Mitsuko Watanabe will exit Vogue Japan at the end of the year, after thirteen years as the editor-in-chief.[132] In January 2022, Tiffany Godoy was announced as the magazine's Head of Editorial Content.[133][134]

Vogue Latinoamérica

[edit]

Vogue Greece

[edit]

Vogue Portugal

[edit]

Vogue Portugal launched in 2002.

Vogue China

[edit]

Vogue India

[edit]

Vogue Türkiye

[edit]

Vogue Türkiye was launched in 2010.

Vogue NL

[edit]

Vogue Thailand

[edit]

The magazine was launched in 2013. The first issue of the magazine sold-out. Editor-in-chief, Kullawit Laosuksri was the only male editor at the helm of Vogue at the time.[135]

Vogue Ukraine

[edit]

Vogue Arabia

[edit]

Vogue Polska

[edit]

Vogue CS

[edit]

Vogue CS (short for Czechoslovakia) was launched in 2018. In February 2018, the Czech-language edition was announced. It premiered in August 2018 under license with V24 Media, and titled Vogue CS, it covers the Czech and Slovak markets.[136]

Vogue Hong Kong

[edit]

Vogue Hong Kong was launched in 2019. In October 2018, the Hong Kong edition was announced. It premiered on March 3, 2019, under a license agreement with Rubicon Media Ltd., with digital and print presence.[137]

Vogue Scandinavia

[edit]

Vogue Philippines

[edit]

In January 2022, Condé Nast partnered with Philippines-based publishing company Mega Global Licensing to launch the edition of the magazine in the country. The first issue was released in September.[138][139] The magazine appointed Bea Valdes as its editor-in-chief.[140]

Vogue Adria

[edit]

Other

[edit]

Currently twenty-eight editions of Vogue operate around the world and four editions are closed. A South African edition also operated in the 1960s, as an offshoot of British Vogue similar to how Vogue Australia and Vogue New Zealand were launched.[141]

Editors of international editions

[edit]

The following highlights circulation dates as well as individuals who have served as editor-in-chief of Vogue:

Countries Circulation Dates Editor-in-Chief Start year End year
United States (Vogue) 1892–present Josephine Redding 1892 1901
Marie Harrison 1901 1914
Edna Woolman Chase 1914 1951
Jessica Daves 1952 1962
Diana Vreeland 1963 1971
Grace Mirabella 1971 1988
Anna Wintour 1988 present
United Kingdom (British Vogue) 1916–present Elspeth Champcommunal 1916 1922
Dorothy Todd 1923 1926
Alison Settle 1926 1934
Elizabeth Penrose 1934 1940
Audrey Withers 1940 1961
Ailsa Garland 1961 1965
Beatrix Miller 1965 1984
Anna Wintour 1985 1987
Liz Tilberis 1988 1992
Alexandra Shulman 1992 2017
Edward Enninful 2017 2023
Chioma Nnadi 2023 present
France (Vogue France)[note 1] 1920–present edited from the USA 1920[142] 1922
Cosette Vogel 1922[143] 1927
Main Bocher 1927[144] 1929
Michel de Brunhoff 1929[145] 1954
Edmonde Charles-Roux 1954[146] 1966
Françoise de Langlade 1966[147] 1968
Francine Crescent 1968[148] 1986
Colombe Pringle 1987[149] 1994
Joan Juliet Buck 1994[150] 2001
Carine Roitfeld 2001[151] 2010
Emmanuelle Alt 2011[152] 2021
Eugénie Trochu 2021[153] present
New Zealand (Vogue New Zealand) 1957–1968[154] edited from the UK 1957[113] 1961
Joan Chesney Frost 1961[115] 1962
Sheila Scotter 1962[116] 1968
Australia (Vogue Australia) 1959–present Rosemary Cooper 1959[155] 1961
Joan Chesney Frost 1961[115] 1962
Sheila Scotter 1962[116] 1971
Eve Harman 1971[156] 1976
June McCallum 1976[157] 1989
Nancy Pilcher 1989[158] 1997
Marion Hume 1997[156] 1998
Juliet Ashworth 1998[156] 1999
Kirstie Clements 1999[159] 2012
Edwina McCann 2012[160] 2023
Christine Centenera 2023[161] present
Italy (Vogue Italia)[note 2] 1964–present Lidia Tabacchi 1964[162] 1966
Franco Sartori 1966[163] 1988
Franca Sozzani 1988[164] 2016
Emanuele Farneti 2017[165] 2021
Francesca Ragazzi 2021[166] present
Brazil (Vogue Brasil) 1975–present Luis Carta 1975 1986
Andrea Carta 1986 2003
Patricia Carta 2003 2010
Daniela Falcão 2010 2016
Silvia Rogar 2016 2018
Paula Merlo 2018 present
Germany (Vogue Deutsch / Vogue Germany) 1979–present Christa Dowling 1979 1989
Angelica Blechschmidt 1989[167] 2003
Christiane Arp 2003[168] 2021
Kerstin Weng 2021[169] present
Mexico (Vogue México) 1980–1995 Waldemar Verdugo Fuentes 1980[170] 1985
Noé Agudo García 1986[171] 1995
1999–present Eva Hughes 2002[172] 2012
Kelly Talamas 2012[173] 2016
Karla Martínez 2016[174] present
Vogue (Vogue España) 1988–present Luis Carta 1988 1994
Yolanda Sacristán 1994 2017
Eugenia de la Torriente 2017 2020
Inés Lorenzo 2021 present
Singapore (Vogue Singapore) 1994–1997 Nancy Pilcher 1994 1995
Michal McKay 1996 1997
2020–present Norman Tan 2020 2023
Demond Lim 2023 present
South Korea (Vogue Korea) 1996–present Myung-hee Lee (이명희) 1996 2016
Kwang-ho Shin (신광호) 2016 present
Taiwan (Vogue Taiwan) 1996–present Sky Wu (吳勝天) 1996 2020
Leslie Sun (孫怡) 2020 present
Russia (Vogue Россия / Vogue Russia) 1998–2022 Aliona Doletskaya 1998[175] 2010
Victoria Davydova 2010[176] 2018
Masha Fedorova 2018[177] 2021
Ksenia Solovieva 2021[178] 2022
Japan (Vogue Japan)[note 3] 1999–present Hiromi Sogo (十河 ひろ美) 1999 2006
Mitsuko Watanabe (渡辺 三津子) 2006 2022
Tiffany Godoy 2022 present
Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic,

El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Miami (USA), Nicaragua, Panama, Puerto Rico, Peru, Uruguay (Vogue Latinoamérica)

1999–present Eva Hughes 2002[172] 2012
Kelly Talamas 2012 2016
Karla Martínez 2016[174] present
Greece (Vogue Greece)[note 4] 2000–2012 Elena Makri 2000 2012
2019–present Thaleia Karafyllidou 2018[179] 2024
Elis Kiss 2024[180] present
Portugal (Vogue Portugal) 2002–present Paula Mateus 2002 2017
Sofia Lucas 2017 present
China (服饰与美容 Vogue China) 2005–present Angelica Cheung (张宇) 2005 2020
Margaret Zhang (章凝) 2021[181] 2024
Rocco Liu 2024[182] present
India (Vogue India) 2007–present Priya Tanna 2007[183] 2021
Megha Kapoor 2021[184] 2023
Rochelle Pinto 2023[185] present
Turkey (Vogue Türkiye) 2010–present Seda Domaniç 2010 2020
Zeynep Yapar 2020 2020
Debora Zakuto 2020 present
Netherlands (Vogue Netherlands / Vogue NL) 2012–2021 Karin Sweerink 2012 2019
Rinke Tjepkema 2019 2021
2022–present Yeliz Çiçek 2022 2024
Linda Gümüs Gerritsen 2024[186] present
Thailand (Vogue Thailand) 2013–present Kullawit Laosuksri 2013[187] present
Ukraine (Vogue Ukraine / Vogue UA) 2013–present Masha Tsukanova 2013[188] 2016
Olga Sushko 2016[189] 2018[190]
Philipp Vlasov 2019[191] 2023
Vena Brykalin 2023[192] present
Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon,

Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates (Vogue Arabia)

2017–present Deena Aljuhani Abdulaziz 2016[193] 2017
Manuel Arnaut 2017[194] present
Poland (Vogue Polska) 2018–present Filip Niedenthal 2017[195] 2021
Ina Lekiewicz Levy 2021[196] present
Czech Republic, Slovakia (Vogue CS / Vogue Czechoslovakia) 2018–present Andrea Běhounková 2018[197] 2023
Danica Kovárová 2023[198] present
Hong Kong (Vogue Hong Kong) 2019–present Peter Wong 2019[199] 2020
Kat Yeung 2020 2022
Ahy Choi 2021 2023
Simon Au 2023[200] present
Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden

(Vogue Scandinavia)

2021–present Martina Bonnier 2020[201] present
Philippines (Vogue Philippines) 2022–present Bea Valdes 2022[202] present
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, Serbia, Slovenia

(Vogue Adria)

2024–present Milan Đačić 2023[203] present

Head of Editorial Content

[edit]

After a consolidation at Condé Nast, the publisher will put its largest titles (including Vogue) under global and regional leadership. The role of editor-in-chief is being replaced in some international editions for the new role of Head of Editorial Content.

Countries Editions Circulation Head of Editorial Content Start year End year Regional Director Global Director
 France Vogue France 1920–present Eugénie Trochu[204] 2021 present Edward Enninful Anna Wintour
 Italy Vogue Italia 1964–present Francesca Ragazzi[205] 2021 present
 Spain Vogue España 1988–present Inés Lorenzo[206][207] 2021 present
 Germany Vogue Deutsch 1979–present Kerstin Weng[208] 2021 present
 India Vogue India 2007–present Megha Kapoor[184] 2021 2023 Leslie Sun
Rochelle Pinto 2023 present
 Japan Vogue Japan 1999–present Tiffany Godoy[209] 2022 present
 Czech Republic
 Slovakia
Vogue CS / Vogue Czechoslovakia 2018–present Danica Kovárová[210] 2023 present Edward Enninful
 United Kingdom British Vogue 1916–present Chioma Nnadi[211] 2024 present

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ As Vogue Paris till 2021
  2. ^ As Novita till 1965, Vogue Italia & Novita till 1966
  3. ^ As Vogue Nippon till 2011
  4. ^ As Vogue Hellas till 2012

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