Background
Barbara Gene Summers was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, to Don and Lucy Summers, the second of her parents" five children. He and my mother had 4 girls before their one and only son arrived." She grew up in Hartford, Connecticut, where her family moved in 1949.
Education
She graduated from Weaver High School in 1963 and then went to the University of Pennsylvania, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts degree.
Career
Her 1998 book, Skin Deep – the story of Black models in America and abroad – is a definitive work on black women in the modeling industry. for which she spent more a decade interviewing fashion professionals on three continents to record their experiences,
Education and career
She subsequently did graduate studies at Yale University and then the University of Paris at the Sorbonne, where she "promptly became a graduate school dropout and a lifelong Francophile". Back in New York, she began her career as a model while working as a college instructor, and she latterly returned to academia, teaching at Hostos Community College in the Bronx. As a writer and editor, she published works including I Dream a World: Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America (1989), Nouvelle Soul: Short Stories (1992), The Price You Pay (a novel set in the world of modeling, 1993), Skin Deep: Inside the World of Black Fashion Models (1998), Black and Beautiful: How Women of Color Changed the Fashion Industry (2001), and Open the Unusual Door: True-Life Stories of Challenge, Adventure, and Success by Black Americans (2005).
Her most notable writing is her 1998 book Skin Deep, which explores the role of African-American models within the fashion industry and the emergence of black designers, and "presents a fascinating portrait of black supermodels", including profiles of Dorothea Towles, Beverly Johnson, Iman, Barbara Cheeseborough, and others
I define myself as an artist. Artists are charged with the special responsibility not just to speak truth but to sing lieutenant
I believe: *We are all related - literally. *While politicians, terrorists, and maniacs of power strive mightily to prove otherwise, war is not the answer.
Love is."
She died unexpectedly in 2014 at the age of 70.