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Deborah
Bright was born in Washington, DC in 1950 and received her MFA from
the University of Chicago in 1975. Her works have been shown internationally
at the Victoria and Albert Museum; the Museet for Fotokunst, Copenhagen;
Nederlands Foto Instituut, Rotterdam; Museum Folkwang, Essen; Canadian
Museum of Contemporary Photography, Ottawa; Cambridge Darkroom (UK);
Vancouver Art Gallery. In the United States, her works can be found
in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art;
National Museum of American Art, Washington, DC; Addison Gallery
of American Art, Andover, MA; Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University;
Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University; Radcliffe Institute for
Advanced Study, Cambridge, MA; Trustman Art Gallery, Simmons College,
Boston, MA; University Art Museum at SUNY Binghamton; California
Museum of Photography, Riverside; Illinois State Museum in Springfield,
IL; Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design. She has received
grants and fellowships from the Mary Ingraham Bunting Institute,
Radcliffe College; Art Matters; National Endowments for the Arts
and the Humanities; Lightwork; New England Foundation for the Arts;
Massachusetts Cultural Council; Somerville Arts Council; Illinois
Arts Council; Mellon Foundation; David and Reva Logan Foundation.
Bright’s
groundbreaking collection of images and writings on photography
and sexuality, The Passionate Camera: photography and bodies
of desire (Routledge, 1998) was a finalist for the 1999 Lambda
Book Award in Visual Arts. In addition, her essays on photography
and cultural issues have appeared in Art Journal, Afterimage,
exposure, Views, Michigan Quarterly. Since 1989, she has been
a professor in the Photography and Art History Departments at the
Rhode Island School of Design. Her photographic works are represented
by the Bernard Toale Gallery, Boston, MA. |
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