Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The ArtIC Presents: Yousuf Karsh: Regarding Heroes Exhibition

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The ArtIC Presents: Yousuf Karsh: Regarding Heroes Exhibition

    THE ARTIC PRESENTS: YOUSUF KARSH: REGARDING HEROES EXHIBITION

    TAXI Design Network
    http://www.designtaxi.com/news.jsp?id=2047 5&monthview=0&month=8&year=2008
    Aug 18 2008
    NY

    Yousuf Karsh's portraits are instantly recognizable. Ernest Hemingway,
    Georgia O'Keeffe, Albert Einstein, Winston Churchill, and Marian
    Anderson, true visual icons of the 20th century, each sat before his
    photographic lens.

    This master portraitist, however, came from humble beginnings. As a
    teenager the Armenian Karsh fled his native Turkey to live first in
    Syria and then in Canada with his photographer uncle. Always connected
    with traditional photographic methods, he honed his skills first as
    an apprentice in Boston from 1928 to 1931 and then in his own studio
    in Ottawa from 1932 until 1992.

    In 1941, his portrait of Winston Churchill immediately earned him an
    international reputation. The image exemplified "the roaring lion"
    standing alone against the fascists that had overrun continental
    Europe. His fame was further enhanced with state commissions of
    political and military leaders during WWII, and his renown continued
    to skyrocket after the war and through the early 1960s when he began
    adding writers, actors, artists, musicians, scientists, statesmen,
    and celebrities to his portfolio of accomplished individuals.

    To mark the centenary of his birth, this retrospective will display
    Karsh's best portrait subjects in the prints he himself preferred. The
    100 photographs in the exhibition are drawn from a set of over 200
    master prints given to the museum as a promised gift by his widow,
    Estrellita Karsh.

    The exhibition's fully illustrated catalogue, written by exhibition
    curator David Travis and issued by Boston publisher David R. Godine,
    traces Karsh's artistic development and reassesses his place in the
    history of photography.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X