![]() ![]() ![]() Later she would work with photographer Bill Richardson. “If it hadn’t been for the two of them I wouldn’t have taken my photography seriously,” she told Time Magazine. After taking a workshop conducted by Richard Avedon and “art director” Marvin Israel, they became her mentors. ![]() From there she worked for Mademoiselle in the editorial department, then as a fashion editor for Harper’s Bazaar.įrustrated by her inability to find a photographer who could capture her vision and execute it, she become a photographer herself during the 1960s. From her start in the fashion industry, she was surrounded by talented people including fashion designer Clare McCardell, whom she worked with as an assistant and fit model. ![]() Intense, shy, and introspective her talent was subtly wrapped up in a childhood rife with isolation and poignancy.Įducated at Brimmer and May School in the Bay of Boston her love for snow-covered landscapes, illuminated windows, fog, wind, and turbulent seas stayed with her, from this time, and often showed up in her later images. Later, when the fashion bug hit her, she relocated to New York. American photographer, Deborah Turbeville, (July 6, 1932-October 23, 2013) was originally from Stonham, Massachusetts. ![]()
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