
Anna Wintour, the legendary editor -in -chief of Vogue, will resign from her role at the head of the iconic fashion magazine after almost four decades.
As the daily front line Daily Front Row and Women’s Wear Daily gives up, while she gives up her editor -in -chief in Vogue, Wintour will continue with her wider roles as the global director of Condé NAS and the global editorial director of Vogue.
Wintour, now 74, first took over the role of editor -in -chief in 1988, followed by Grace Mirabella. Her debut envelopes in November of the same year – representing the model of Michael Bercu in the Christian Lacroix top and faded jeans – broke the fashion standards by introducing Denim for the first time on the cover of Vogue.
Anna Wintour will continue to serve as the global director of Condé Nas Global Content, oversees all companies around the world – including American Vogue, Vanity Fair, GQ, Wired, AD, Glamor, Condé Nas Traveler, Bon Appétit, Tatler, Allure and World interiors – New Yorker exceptions. It will also maintain its Met Gala leadership, fashion premier annual event and main fundraiser for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute.
As part of the broader editorial restructuring, which began four years ago, Condé unified his global editorial teams. Each market now has the head of the content management content and reports the global editorial director. This system, which has already been implemented on other Vogue Editions around the world, will now also apply to American Vogue. The company will not name the new editor -in -chief for American Vogue, instead installs the head of the editorial content that will allow Wintour to focus more on the wider portfolio.
Wintour, first named Vogue’s Creative Director in 1983 and later led British Vogue from 1985 to 1987, returned to the American edition in 1988. McQueen and John Galliano. Her vision also helped to expand the Vogue brand around the world.
(Tagstotranslate) Anna Wintour