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Russh: People: Deborah Turbeville

Turbeville was born and raised in America’s northeast, moving to New York at 20-years-old. With the guidance and support of famed fashion photographer Richard Avedon, who, alongside influential art director Marvin Israel, had given a series of advanced lectures that Turbeville attended, she set about a career in photography.

“[Saint Petersburg] became a second home for me ... and it’s really inspiring. I like the shabbiness of it ... I like the greyness of it.”

Even more significant than the sheer size of Deborah Turbeville’s body of work was her invention of a new school of photography, bringing charm and romanticism to images with a clever use of lighting, mist and smoke,immobility of movement and emotional distance from her subjects. In many
ways, such an approach, when she began, sought to oppose her male contemporaries like Helmut Newton, whose overstyled approach was far the opposite. Her aesthetic has never been successfully replicated, but certainly paved the way for contemporary photographers to present more ethereal,
feminine visions.

“I have an idea and a place and a subject and I put them together because they say something to me
that I can’t explain to anybody else.”

 

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