Franca Sozzani (Italian pronunciation:[ˈfraŋkasotˈtsaːni]; 20 January 1950 – 22 December 2016) was an Italian journalist and the
editor-in-chief of Vogue Italia from 1988 until her death in 2016.[1]
She married at the age of 20; the union was dissolved three months later.[3]
Sozzani's career began as an assistant at the children's fashion magazine Vogue Bambini in 1976.[1][3] She directed the publications Lei beginning in 1980 and Per Lui starting in 1982 before heading up Vogue Italia in 1988.[1]
In the 1990s, Sozzani helped create the phenomenon of the
supermodel with one of her closest long-term collaborators,
Steven Meisel. She also championed a group of photographers including
Bruce Weber,
Peter Lindbergh, and
Paolo Roversi,
Michel Comte giving them complete freedom to choose models and subjects, and encouraging them to experiment with their work.[2][4] She was appointed editor-in-chief of
Condé Nast Italia in 1994.[1]
In 2010, Sozzani published a selection of her blog posts from the "Editor's Notes" pages of Vogue.it as a book, I capricci della moda.[5]
As well as her editorial writing, Sozzani also wrote photography and art books among them "British Artists at Work" with photographer
Amanda Eliasch. Sozzani provided text for exhibition catalogues, often collaborating with other writers, journalists and artists on publications.[6] In 2006, she became editor of Vogue l'Uomo and in February 2011, she launched Vogue Curvy, staffed by
plus-size bloggers who offer fashion tips for the full-figured.[3][6] In September 2015, she took over editorship of Vogue Sposa and Vogue Bambini.[7]
Sozzani was known for including topics and issues in her magazine which other fashion publications avoided, such as
domestic violence, drug abuse and recovery, and the
Gulf of Mexico oil spill of 2010.[1] Issues of her magazine included "The Black Issue" (which featured only models of colour), "Makeover" (discussing
plastic surgery) and "Rebranding Africa".[1]
Sozzani collaborated with artists
Maurizio Cattelan and
Vanessa Beecroft on exhibits and performances.[10][11] She also curated several exhibitions and retrospectives, including: 30 Years of Italian Vogue (
Mario Testino), Vietnam Story and My Own Story in Vogue (Bruce Weber), Women (Peter Lindbergh), and Portraits of Elegance (Milan Triennale), as well as
Francesco Scavullo.[11]
Sozzani contributed to a number of charitable organisations. She was a founding member of Child Priority – a non-profit organization created by Condé Nast to offer concrete study and work opportunities for those who have none despite being talented and artistically gifted.[15] In addition, she worked with the AIDS organisation Convivo and from March 2013 she was the president of the
European Institute of Oncology Foundation.[14]
Publications
A Noir: An exploration of the colour Black between fashion and art, (1986), published by
Assouline[16]
Valentino’s Red Book (2000), credited with original concept, published by Rizzoli International[19]
Work in progress: photography (2001), co-written with James Truman, published by Art Books International[20]
British Artists At Work: An itinerary among the most important British artists of the time, credited with original concept, published by Assouline (2003)[21]
I capricci della moda (2010), published by Bompiani[5]
Emerald: twenty-one centuries of jewelled opulence and power (2013), co-written with Joanna Hardy,
Jonathan Self and Hettie Judah, published by Thames & Hudson[22]
kARTell – 150 items, 150 artworks (2016), published by Skira Editore[23]
Family
Sozzani had one son,
Francesco Carrozzini (born 1982), a photographer and director. Her sister,
Carla Sozzani, is the owner of
10 Corso Como, a
Milan photography gallery and store.[24] Sozzani's niece, Sara Maino, is an editor at Italian Vogue.[1]