One of the most important and collectible French Vogue editions ever published.
The Issue that Celebrated 100 Years of Cinema —and Defined an Era of Supermodel Glamour
Published in December 1994 to mark the centenary of cinema, this extraordinary
316-page edition brought together the greatest names in modelling, photography, and a single, unrepeatable document of 1990s luxury culture.
Three decades later, it remains one of the most sought-after vintage magazine
collectibles in the world
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THE STORY
A Once-in-a-Century Publication
Some magazine issues are simply products of their moment —competent, attractive, forgettable. And then there are issues like Vogue Paris N°752, which arrive at the precise intersection of cultural forces so powerful, so perfectly aligned, that they transcend the category of magazine entirely and become artifacts of history.
Published in December 1994, this issue was conceived around one of the most significant cultural anniversaries of the twentieth century: the 100th ANNIVERSARY OF CINEMA. The Lumière brothers had first projected moving images for a paying public in Paris in December 1895, and the French fashion press was determined to mark the centenary with appropriate ambition.
The result was a 316-page monument.
1894 CINEMA established the standards of its era — that marshalled the greatest photographers, models, actresses, and directors of the day in service of a single editorial
vision.
What makes this issue extraordinary is not merely its content, impressive as that is, but its timing. December 1994 sits at what collectors and fashion historians now recognize as the absolute zenith of the classical supermodel era. Karen Mulder and Claudia Schiffer were at the peak of their cultural power — household names, global icons, the faces that defined an idea of beauty so total it has never quite been replicated. To have both of them, alongside a genuine cinema legend in Isabelle Adjani, within the pages of a single issue is a convergence that simply could not be engineered today.
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THE COVER
Karen Mulder & the 1930s Hollywood Dream
Photographer Michael Thompson shot Karen Mulder for the cover in a deliberate evocation of 1930s Hollywood glamour — the era of Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich, and the studio system at its most mythologically powerful. The composition is classically architectural: high contrast, deep shadow, a quality of light that feels borrowed from a
cinematographer's reel rather than a fashion photographer's studio.
Mulder, at this point in her career, was the preeminent face in European fashion — a Dutch-born model whose particular combination of refinement and accessibility made her the default choice for the most exacting editorial commissions. Thompson's cover image captures something essential about her appeal: the sense that she is not merely
beautiful but composed, that her face is a studied, deliberate thing, as much art direction as biology.
The cover's cinematic reference is not merely decorative. It argues a thesis — that the supermodel of 1994 is the direct heir of the Hollywood star of 1934, that the cultural function of the idealized female face has migrated from the silver screen to the magazine page, and that Vogue Paris is the primary theater of this migration. It is an audacious argument, and the image makes it convincingly.
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INSIDE THE ISSUE
Key Contributors & Spreads
The depth of talent assembled within this issue re$ects both the cultural
weight of the anniversary being celebrated and the particular ambition of Editor-in-Chief Joan Juliet Buck, whose tenure at Vogue Paris (1994– 2001) is now regarded as one of the most intellectually serious chapters in the magazine's history. Buck consistently pushed French Vogue toward genuine cultural engagement — commissioning writers, artists, and "lmmakers rather than simply fashion photographers — and this issue
represents her vision at its most realized.
Claudia Schiffer — photographed by Marc Hispard in a homage to Brigitte Bardot in Le Mépris
— Isabelle Adjani — photographed by Brigitte Lacombe
— David LaChapelle — Blade Runner fashion spread
— Enrique Badalescu — Metropolis fashion editorial
— Chris Marker — E!ets et Gestes
— Catherine Deneuve & Yves Saint Laurent — La Belle et le Couturier
— Jean Réno, Daniel Day-Lewis — actor portraiture
— Jeremy Irons, Gérard Depardieu — actor portraiture
— John Travolta, John Malkovich — actor portraiture
— Marilyn Monroe tribute — Platine: Bijoux Éternels
The Claudia Schi!er spread deserves particular attention. Photographer
Marc Hispard's homage to Bardot's famous scene in Godard's Le Mépris
(1963) is an audaciously layered gesture: it references one of cinema's
most iconic images of female beauty, "ltered through the gaze of one of
France's greatest directors, and reinterprets it through the lens of 1994's
de"ning supermodel. The result is an image about images — about how
beauty is constructed, transmitted, and transformed across decades.
The Isabelle Adjani presence gives the issue something that pure fashion
photography cannot: the gravity of genuine cinematic stardom. Adjani,
twice winner of the César award for Best Actress by 1994, represents
precisely the bridge between fashion and cinema that the issue's concept
demands. Brigitte Lacombe's portraits of her carry the weight of a woman
who has inhabited iconic roles — Possession, Camille Claudel, La Reine
Margot — and the images know it.
WHY IT'S RARE
Scarcity, Condition & Collector Demand
Several factors converge to make Vogue Paris N°752 genuinely rare in the collector market, rather than merely desirable. The first is simple attrition: magazines are ephemeral objects, printed on paper intended to last a season rather than decades. Of the original print run, a significant proportion will have been discarded, damaged by humidity, faded by sunlight, or lost to the general entropy that consumes periodicals over thirty years.
The second factor is the issue's original special format. Some copies were
packaged with a metallic movie reel canister as a promotional element —
an art object in its own right that dramatically increases the desirability
and value of copies that have survived with it intact. Complete copies
with the canister represent the absolute summit of this collectible
category.
The third factor is the speci"c moment the issue represents. The mid-
1990s supermodel era — Mulder, Schi#er, Crawford, Campbell,
Evangelista — has been con"rmed by the resale market as one of the most
valuable periods in vintage fashion media. There is a generation of
collectors who grew up with these faces as their primary aesthetic
reference, and who are now in a financial position to pursue that
nostalgia seriously.
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