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Armenian Photographer That Captured Famous Faces Of The 20th Century

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  • Armenian Photographer That Captured Famous Faces Of The 20th Century

    ARMENIAN PHOTOGRAPHER THAT CAPTURED FAMOUS FACES OF THE 20TH CENTURY FROM ELIZABETH TAYLOR TO JOHN KENNEDY

    http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/10/31/armenian-photographer-that-captured-the-famous-faces-of-the-20th-century-from-elizabeth-taylor-to-andy-warhol/
    11:56 31.10.2013

    Yousuf Karsh has snapped portraits of some of the most iconic figures
    of the last century. His wide-ranging pool of subjects includes John
    F. Kennedy, Joan Crawford, and Walt Disney. And yet, behind that lens,
    Yousuf Karsh remains a rather unknown name, Sarah Moroz writes in an
    article published by the Slate Magazine.

    Though his photographs captured world-famous celebrities and
    intellectuals, Karsh himself grew up with difficult circumstances.

    Born in Turkish Armenia in 1908 during the Armenian genocide, he and
    his family were forced to flee their homeland when he was young. By
    way of Syria, Karsh eventually settled in Canada. He lived with his
    Quebec-based uncle, a professional photographer who mentored him in
    the craft.

    Karsh's career took off independently in the 1930s, boosted by the
    artsy network of his first wife, French-born Solange Gauthier. He
    also developed a repertoire photographing political events through
    his friendship with Canada's then-Prime Minister Mackenzie King. His
    career was launched into an international realm when, in December
    1941, Karsh was asked to take a portrait of Winston Churchill during
    his state visit to Ottawa, Canada. That success helped his portfolio
    expand to include celebrities and dignitaries from the vast worlds
    of politics, art, literature, architecture, and the humanities.

    Andy Warhol, 1979

    Copyright Estate of Yousuf Karsh/Collection of the Museum of Fine
    Arts, Boston

    Princess Grace de Monaco, 1956

    Copyright Estate of Yousuf Karsh/Collection of the Museum of Fine
    Arts, Boston

    John F. Kennedy

    Copyright Estate of Yousuf Karsh/Collection of the Museum of Fine
    Arts, Boston

    Karsh produced more than 150,000 negatives using a large-format 8-by-10
    camera throughout his career. Each sitting he would take about 15 to
    20 photographs over a two-hour period. He used Tungsten studio lights
    or natural light rather than flash so he could follow the organic
    progression of his conversation with his subject and photograph him
    or her without interruption.

    Jerry Fielder worked with Karsh for 13 years and assisted the
    photographer on hundreds of sessions. "He would learn as much as he
    could about each person he photographed in advance of their meeting,"
    Fielder said. "He always required time with his subjects beforehand,
    either dinner the night before or a couple of hours the morning of
    the session." Fielder called Karsh "a raconteur," noting that he was
    "very charming and people enjoyed talking to him." But, Fielder said,
    as Karsh's subjects were enjoying his company, Karsh was watching them.

    "He would ask them about their children or about their work, and he
    would see the expressions on their face. So when they got in front
    of the camera later, when he saw a moment they were being themselves,
    he knew what to do."

    Charles-Edouard Jeanneret (Le Corbusier), 1954

    Copyright Estate of Yousuf Karsh/Collection of the Museum of Fine
    Arts, Boston

    Alfred Hitchcock, 1960

    Copyright Estate of Yousuf Karsh/Collection of the Museum of Fine
    Arts, Boston

    Karsh's images have an elegant plainspokenness to them: direct, often
    closely framed. Many portraits highlight the attributes you'd expect
    of these famous personalities, though with some of the artists and
    architects (Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier, I.M. Pei), Karsh widens
    the framing to include them in their studio settings, revealing their
    personalities by their facial expressions and postures and by what
    their surrounding environments say about them.

    Karsh worked for more than half a century before he closed his studio
    in 1992. Since Karsh's death in 2002, Fielder has been the director
    of the Karsh estate. He curated a show of Karsh's work at the Mona
    Bismarck Foundation in Paris, currently on view through January.

    "Because of the background he came from-which was so awful-I think
    you can emerge bitter and resentful," Fielder said of Karsh. "But his
    approach was that he saw the worst of life, so he wanted to celebrate
    the best of life-he wanted to celebrate people of accomplishment."

    Jacques Henri Lartigue, 1981

    Copyright Estate of Yousuf Karsh/Collection of the Museum of Fine
    Arts, Boston

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