Margaret Zhang
Margaret Zhang (章凝) (Born 1993) is an Australian and Chinese filmmaker, writer, model, and creative director. She was the editor-in-chief of Vogue China until 2024. Early lifeZhang was born in Australia to Chinese parents.[1] Zhang’s parents moved to Sydney, Australia from Huangyan, a town in China’s Zhejiang province. Her mother is from a farming family and her father was from a city.[2] Her father Liangchi Zhang, worked at the University of Sydney as a professor of mechanical engineering.[1] As a child Zhang and her brother studied ballet and piano.[1] The world of dance introduced her to fashion.[2] In 2009 at the age of 16, Zhang launched her blog 'Shine by Three' as a repository for her personal thoughts and images that inspired her.[1] Zhang received her bachelor of commerce and law from The University of Sydney.[1] CareerWhile attending the University of Sydney, Zhang arranged to attend her first fashion week in New York with financial support from the business school.[3] In 2014, she collaborated with Matchesfashion as a guest buyer during New York Fashion Week.[4] In 2014, Zhang was part of series one of Australian reality documentary television series, Fashion Bloggers.[5][6] The reality show chronicled both the professional and personal lives of independent lifestyle and fashion bloggers.[6] In 2015, Zhang became one of Clinique’s global faces for the company’s #FaceForward campaign.[3] In the same year, Zhang won Elle Digital Influencer of the Year award.[3] As word of her influence and skills spread, Zhang created photography, styling, and creative direction for the likes of L’Officiel, Harper’s Bazaar, Nylon, Marie Claire, Buro24/7 and Elle.[3] Her profile as an influencer and model has grown over the years and she is a street style and front-row catwalk regular.[3] Zhang has appeared on the covers of Elle, Rouge Fashion Book and Nylon.[3] CNN identified Zhang as a leading fashion photographer in Asia and she went on to be the first Asian face to cover ELLE Australia.[7] Established in 2016, Zhang is the co-founder of 'Background', which is a global consultancy that helps bridge western and Chinese cultures and has worked with companies such as YouTube, Airbnb, Swarovski, Louis Vuitton and Mulberry on their campaigns.[1][8] She credits her drive to create relationships with brands, instead of a transactional approach, to providing her with bigger opportunities to support and grow creative ideas together.[9] At a solo show in Sydney in 2017, Zhang exhibited a series of 39 unseen photographic works and premiered her first short film which was a 15-minute exploration of her relationship with classical music.[7] It received critical acclaim.[7] In 2018, Zhang co-curated the first annual FOREFRONT Summit focused on inter-industry business problem-solving which led her to develop FOREFRONT+, a round table series of conversations that cover subjects of universal concern.[7] In 2019, for the relaunch of THE FACE Magazine, Zhang was brought in as Creative-Director-at-Large for Asia.[7] In 2021, it was announced that Zhang would become the Editor in Chief of Vogue China at the age of 27, the youngest EIC at Vogue.[1] Zhang's understanding of digital and emerging trends for a new generation of Chinese was one of the reasons she was hired as she succeeded Angelica Cheung.[1][10] Zhang resides between New York and Shanghai and is currently working on her first feature film.[7]
In February 2024, Zhang was announced that she would leave Vogue China when her contract ends in March and the June issue is her final one.[12][13] References
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