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9780847832194 Casa No Name

Written by Deborah Turbeville
Pub Date: April 2009
Format: Hardcover
Category: Photography - Individual Photographer
US Price: $60.00
CAN Price: $69.00
ISBN: 978-0-8478-3219-4 (0-8478-3219-8)
Publisher: Rizzoli
Trim Size: 8-1/2 x 11-1/2




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About this Book

In the tradition of Kahlo and Allende, Turbeville’s brilliantly stylish portrait of her Mexican house evokes both her vivid imagination and the mystique of Mexico. High-ceilinged rooms surround a central courtyard that is lined with faded frescoes of biblical scenes. The glimmer and shafts of diffused light that stream into the courtyards and curtained rooms add to the romantic atmosphere—one feels as though they have entered into a quintessential Turbeville photograph. Turbeville has captured the spiritual nature of Mexican culture by incorporating into candlelit interiors such traditional religious artifacts as colorful painted tin retablos, hand-carved saints, wooden tableau boxes, and a central wooden figure of the local Virgin Saint Maria Candelaria: aged objets that are handmade, tell stories, and are arranged in artful vignettes. Casa No Name speaks of magic realism and beckons the reader into the private world of this visionary artist. Turbeville’s diaristic presentation of her home in the central highlands of Mexico is a welcome addition to her rich oeuvre and an inspiration for anyone interested in the soul and style of Mexico.

Praise

"Deborah Turbeville, the photographer whose romantic fin de siecle imagery wafted through the pages of Vogue and other fashion and art magazines in the '70s and '80s, is at her moodiest in "Casa No Name" a pictorial memoir of the house she has had in San Miguel, Mexico, since 1985." ~The New York Times

"...haunting collection of photographs..." ~Interiors Magazine

“Turbeville uses her signature painterly quality throughout this haunting portrait and intersperses it with journal entries and poetry waxing lyrical about her spiritual connection with her home.” ~Picture Magazine




About the Author

Deborah Turbeville’s work first appeared in Vogue in the 1970s. Since then, she has been a dominant figure in contemporary photography. Her work continues to be exhibited around the world and is published regularly in many international magazines.


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