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The World According To Karsh

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  • The World According To Karsh

    THE WORLD ACCORDING TO KARSH

    Torontoist
    http://torontoist.com/2009/02/th e_world_according_to_karsh.php
    Feb 18 2009
    Canada

    Several kilometres north-west of the city's limits, we encountered
    something we hadn't been expecting. Families shuffling around in
    coordinating Gore-Tex jackets, frail-looking couples clutching crumpled
    museum maps, and a few Pretty Young Things looking...surprised. In
    fact, everyone looked just a little surprised.

    There, in Kleinburg, Ontario, an hour away from Toronto's acronymic
    attractions, we found ourselves in slack-jawed awe of the portraits
    propped up before us. Sure, we'd heard of Yousuf Karsh before, but for
    all we thought we knew of the Armenian-born photographer, our "new"
    impressions of his work trumped all our old preconceptions. Indeed,
    the McMichael's two-part Karsh exhibition ("'Karshed': Yousuf Karsh
    Selected Portraits" and "Yousuf Karsh: Industrial Images") revealed
    a world of fleeting moments--captioned by the late photographer
    himself. Through this juxtaposition--of Karsh's images with his own
    words--the observer can't help but see the subject a little more
    clearly through the photographer's eyes; Karsh's eloquent, written
    appraisals of his subjects help to "anchor" his photographs (or so
    Barthes would say). His asides provide the context that most captions
    fail to deliver: the observer really does walk away from each portrait
    with a better understanding of both the subject and photographer.

    But back to the photographs themselves. Judging from the tight,
    single-file line that snaked from the first "Karshed" portrait to
    the thirtieth (and last), it was clear that this portion of the
    exhibit was the real crowd-pleaser. Hemingway, Einstein, Warhol,
    Churchill--every face on the wall was familiar. And yet there
    was something we hadn't seen--or simply didn't recognize--in each
    portrait. These celebrities looked...human; Karsh rarely captured
    (or, at least, framed) "God-like" moments.

    Just one room over from "Karshed," the late photographer's "Industrial
    Images" collection drew a slightly (and we really do mean slightly)
    thinner crowd. Although Karsh's subject matter--industrial workers on
    the job--had changed, his methodology remained the same: he refused
    to remove his subjects from their contexts. By allowing his models
    the freedom of, well, doing what they always do, he immortalized
    what was second-nature to them. And the result? These workers (from
    the Ford Motor Company of Canada, Atlas Steel in Welland, Ontario,
    and Pennsylvania's Sharon Steel) looked just as poised, just as
    vulnerable, and just as real as the celebrities on the wall next door.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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