![]() ![]() Turbeville’s show at Pucci, entitled “Silent Film,” launches Thursday night with a party. “I scratch and do a lot of things with my photographs,” culminating in a distressed look of antiquity and ambiguity.Ī Closer Look at the NBA 2023 Season Tunnel Fits ![]() Though the prints are digitally reproduced and available in a limited run, she feels they capture all the imperfections, haziness and tonality of the originals, even the masking tape she used to cover tears. “They’re really remade from prints of years ago, when you had all this marvelous paper that doesn’t exist anymore,” Turbeville said. ![]() So exhibiting in the 15,000-square-foot penthouse of Ralph Pucci International at 44 West 18 Street in New York triggered a different approach, causing her to make larger prints than normal and clustering them into collages or visual stories, to be sold that way.įor the exhibit at Pucci, she’s reinvented much of her groundbreaking work from the late Seventies and Eighties. “I like to cram things,” like an artist obsessively fills every inch of a notebook with sketches, she says. ![]() Avant-garde photographer Deborah Turbeville typically exhibits in galleries where space is tight, and that’s just fine with her. ![]()
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