Martina Gazzoni was born in Italy, though her path eventually led her to Paris in the 1990s, where she took on the role of cultural editor for Moda, a magazine devoted to fashion and society. When the publication closed its doors a few years later, Martina Gazzoni found herself at a crossroads — by then a mother, she chose to step into a new role as an agent for a luxury real estate firm.
That chapter, however, didn't last. Martina Gazzoni soon realized that sales wasn't where her strengths lay, and she felt the pull toward something more aligned with who she was. So she made two deliberate moves. First, she sent photographs of herself to the leading model agency in Paris, which was actively scouting baby boomers for its modeling roster. Second, she enrolled in an art course focused on techniques for revamping and customizing furniture — a creative outlet she'd quietly nurtured for years.
Both pursuits flourished. Martina Gazzoni went on to become a recognized "silver model," building a portfolio of editorials and campaigns for some of France's most established brands, including Evian, Damart, and La Roche-Posay — work that placed modeling, and the broader world of models and model agencies, firmly at the center of her second career. Alongside her modeling, Martina Gazzoni continued developing her artistic practice, transforming discarded furniture into reimagined pieces through collage and paint.
Through it all, Martina Gazzoni has come to embody a simple belief: it's never too late to learn new skills, embrace modeling later in life, and live a creative life on your own terms.