Debbie Harry: The Making of an Icon
Before social media, before online media, and long before artists could communicate directly with millions of followers, public identity was built through photographs.
Magazine covers, record sleeves, posters, newspapers, publicity portraits, and music magazines shaped how audiences understood musicians. For most people, photography was not simply a record of an artist—it was the artist.
Few figures illustrate this better than Debbie Harry.
Emerging from New York's downtown scene in the mid-1970s, Harry became one of the most recognizable faces of her generation. Yet her transformation from local musician to international icon was not driven solely by music. It was built through a remarkable body of imagery created by photographers who understood that they were documenting something unique.
Chris Stein, Bob Gruen, Roberta Bayley, Ebet Roberts, Mick Rock, Sheila Rock, Bobby Grossman, Godlis, Allan Tannenbaum and others did far more than photograph Debbie Harry. Together, they helped shape one of the defining visual identities of twentieth-century popular culture.
From CBGB and the Bowery to magazine covers, world tours, studio portraits and collaborations with figures such as Andy Warhol, David Bowie and Iggy Pop, these photographs reveal how an image became an icon.
This collection explores not only Debbie Harry's career, but the essential role photography played in creating the Debbie Harry the world came to know.