Skip to main content
BoF Logo

The Business of Fashion

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

Fashion Editor Long Nguyen Has Died

During his decades-long career, Nguyen held roles at the magazines Flaunt and Detour, as well as Dolce & Gabbana
Long Nguyen died at the age of 59 on Thursday.
Long Nguyen died at the age of 59 on Thursday. (Getty Images)

The Vietnamese-born stylist and critic, a longtime staple of fashion’s front rows, passed away on Thursday after a long illness. He was 59.

For about two decades starting in 1998, Nguyen was the co-founder and style director at independent fashion magazine Flaunt, known for its provocative and ambitious editorials. In its heyday, the magazine featured unconventional models and avant-garde concepts, such as elderly women in high-fashion ready-to-wear, shot by Taryn Simon, or models in a disease-induced apocalypse, shot by David LaChapelle. Nguyen announced his exit from Flaunt in 2019 when a former assistant sued the magazine’s CEO Luis Barajas for workplace harassment, according to WWD. (The suit was later dropped). At that time, Barajas said Nguyen’s role had been terminated four years earlier.

Before co-founding Flaunt in 1998, Nguyen was the style director at Detour magazine, when its imagery was central to the “heroin-chic” style that dominated the mid-to-late 1990s. The magazine published photographs of gloomy models shot by Davide Sorrenti that caused an uproar outside fashion, seen by many as glamourising drug use.

“If photography is to mirror life — no matter how, or under what circumstances we live — then this mirror has many faces,” Nguyen wrote in Detour in 1997, responding to the backlash. “These types of fashion pictures scrutinize our cultural, social and even political barometers — they ask questions instead of just requiring readers to look at clothes.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Nguyen began his career in fashion in the late 1980s, when a chance meeting with Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana at a restaurant led to a job. He opened the first US office for the Italian luxury brand in 1988, establishing relationships with the likes of Madonna and other celebrities.

In more recent years, Nguyen published runway reviews for The Impression and Fashionista. At the time of his death, he was working on a book about the “golden age of fashion” from 1994 to 1999.

He graduated from Princeton University in 1984 with a degree in history.

In This Article
Topics

© 2024 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Media
How fashion media is adapting its approach to content, platforms and business models.

BoF is One of the World’s Most Innovative Companies of 2024

Fast Company has named The Business of Fashion one of the ‘world’s most innovative companies’ for a second time for demonstrating ‘how a media brand can leverage AI to add reader value rather than erode trust with AI-written news articles.’


view more

Subscribe to the BoF Daily Digest

The essential daily round-up of fashion news, analysis, and breaking news alerts.

The Business of Fashion

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON
The Business of Beauty Global Awards - Deadline 30 April 2024
© 2024 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions, Privacy Policy, Cookie Policy and Accessibility Statement.
The Business of Beauty Global Awards - Deadline 30 April 2024