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On Assignment: Karsh 100 Exhibit At The MFA

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  • On Assignment: Karsh 100 Exhibit At The MFA

    ON ASSIGNMENT: KARSH 100 EXHIBIT AT THE MFA
    By Michael Merline

    Boston Globe
    http://www.boston.com/community/photos/raw/2 008/12/on_assignment_karsh_100_exhibi.html
    Dec 29 2008
    MA

    As you enter the "Karsh 100: A Biography in Images" exhibit at the
    Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, you will see Yousuf Karsh's photography
    equipment, which includes his camera on a tripod, the camera case,
    and his hat on the case -- as though you are in his studio for a
    portrait sitting. And as you stroll through this studio/exhibit,
    you will see many of his famous (and infamous) subjects who posed in
    front of this very same camera.

    Yousuf Karsh was born in Mardin, Armenia, on Dec. 23, 1908 (100 years
    ago this month). He arrived in Canada in 1925 and his Uncle George
    Nakash, a photographer, was waiting for him in Ottawa. Karsh worked
    in his uncle's studio in the summer of 1926. Shortly after that first
    summer in the studio, his uncle arranged for an apprenticeship for
    Karsh with fellow Armenian John H. Garo, a portrait photographer
    in Boston.

    Karsh left Boston in 1931 and returned to Ottawa, where he opened a
    photography studio. One of his first portraits was of Franklin Delano
    Roosevelt when he visited Canada in 1936. His best known portrait
    is Winston Churchill; Karsh photographed him in 1941 when Churchill
    visited Ottawa. It is said to be one of the most reproduced photos
    in the world.

    Photo: Audrey Hepburn / 1956 photo by Yousuf Karsh / Gelatin silver
    print Courtesy of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

    Photo: Winston Churchill / 1941 photo by Yousuf Karsh / Gelatin silver
    print Courtesy of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

    This portrait makes one wonder what Karsh said to the prime minister or
    what Churchill was thinking to produce the distinctive arched eyebrow
    and frown. In his career, Karsh had 15,312 opportunities (the number
    of portrait sittings he recorded) to meet many people and get many
    expressions that became permanently recorded for the world to see.

    Among the luminaries he photographed were George Bernard Shaw, the
    British royal family, Ansel Adams, Albert Einstein, J. Edgar Hoover,
    Judy Garland, Helen Keller, US Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Henry Kissinger,
    and Mother Teresa.

    Photo: George Bernard Shaw / Photo by Yousuf Karsh Courtesy of the
    Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

    Other works in the exhibit include commercial photography, placed
    against a back wall -- almost to signify that Karsh's success lay
    not in his commercial work, but his outstanding portraits.

    Karsh retired in 1997 and returned to Boston with his wife
    Estrellita. He passed away in 2002. His widow still resides in Boston,
    and is involved with philanthropic causes including the MFA, the
    Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and other charities.

    Karsh 100: A Biography in Images Through Monday, Jan. 19 Museum of
    Fine Arts Avenue of the Arts 465 Huntington Avenue Boston, MA 02115
    617-267-9300

    (Sources used for this essay include the Yousuf Karsh website and
    this Globe feature story on Estrellita Karsh.)
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