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Karsh suite at the Chateau Laurier reopens to public

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  • Karsh suite at the Chateau Laurier reopens to public

    Guelph Mercury (Ontario, Canada)
    July 21, 2007 Saturday
    Final Edition


    Karsh suite at the Chateau Laurier reopens to public

    Canadian Press


    For almost two decades, Yousef and Estrellita Karsh called Suite 358
    at the Chateau Laurier home.

    Now the simple yet elegant, multiroom suite is home to the likes of
    Ernest Hemingway, Pablo Picasso and George Bernard Shaw.

    They are portraits, of course. Karsh portraits.

    And recently, no less than Estrellita Karsh herself was there to
    reopen the newly refurbished apartment where she and her renowned
    photographer husband lived and entertained between portrait sessions
    with many of the greatest leaders, celebrities and cognoscenti of the
    20th Century.

    "It was a wonderful apartment; we loved being there,'' Estrellita
    Karsh said in an interview. "And, more than anything, we loved being
    in the Chateau.

    "They all became our family. A hotel, by its nature, is a transient
    place. And we were there, permanently. So that made a huge difference
    in the relationships with the staff. We were the Ma and Pa Kettle of
    the hotel.''

    Estrellita hasn't stayed in the suite since the couple moved out in
    1998, but she has often visited and says the "spirits'' in the suite
    remain "very, very good,'' much as they did the first time the couple
    walked in.

    "It's just one of those apartments where your heart leaps, you know
    it's 'it.' And we did know.''

    One's heart might leap at the price: $1,800 a night to sleep with the
    ghosts of greatness.

    Virtually everybody who was anybody sought immortality through the
    lenses of Karsh's cameras.

    Known worldwide as Karsh of Ottawa, his sixth floor studio at what is
    now called the Fairmont Chateau Laurier became a waypoint for titans
    of the 20th Century. And if they couldn't come to him, Karsh went to
    them.

    Kennedy, Castro, Hepburn, Einstein, Churchill, Mandela, Schweitzer,
    Kruschev. Presidents and prime ministers. Kings and queens.
    Scientists and doctors. Authors, composers and artists. The list
    seems endless.

    "When the famous start thinking of immortality, they call for Karsh
    of Ottawa,'' George Perry once wrote in London's Sunday Times.

    Karsh, born in Turkey on Dec. 23, 1908, left his native land to
    escape the persecution Armenians endured and came to Canada in 1924
    to live with his photographer uncle in Sherbrooke, Que.

    He dreamed of becoming a doctor but didn't have the money for medical
    school. After a brief apprenticeship his uncle sent him off to Boston
    to study photography under eminent portraitist John H. Garo.

    It was there, in Boston's museums and galleries, that Karsh refined
    his understanding of light and shadow.

    He launched his Ottawa studio in 1932, moving to his famous digs at
    the Chateau, just a stone's throw from Parliament Hill, in 1972.

    "As a capital city, I knew Ottawa would be a crossroads for statesmen
    coming from London and Washington,'' he once recalled. "I felt there
    would be great advantages here and I would be ready for them when
    they came.''

    Karsh loved people, and could hold his own with the best of them.

    His sessions were events in themselves and became renowned for their
    repartee. An engaging, intelligent personality, he had a gift for
    disarming his subjects, for dismantling the walls that people erect
    between themselves and the camera -- exposing, it seemed at his best
    times, their very souls.

    "He had a great ability to get right to the heart of the matter and
    be able to put it into a photograph,'' his late brother, Malak Karsh,
    a renowned architectural and landscape photographer in his own right,
    once said of him.

    Karsh was polite and curious. He asked questions, elicited answers,
    reflections, profound moods. His sessions became known as "visits''
    and his subjects gave of themselves "with love and respect,'' said
    his brother.

    His innovative use of light and composition -- he worked most often
    in shades of grey -- helped turn a formidable portraitist into a
    brilliant artist.

    In September 1992, the Karsh Photographic Studio finally closed its
    doors to allow the master more time to pursue books and international
    exhibitions, which he did right up until he died.

    In 1997, he bid farewell to Ottawa and he and Estrellita, a medical
    researcher, packed their bags and headed for Boston. Upon leaving, he
    presented a small collection of classic portraits to the Chateau.
    Hanging in the lobby is his iconic portrait of Winston Churchill,
    along with those of Albert Einstein, humorist Stephen Leacock,
    cellist Pablo Casals, and artists Georgia O'Keeffe and Jean-Paul
    Riopelle.

    The recipient of 17 honorary degrees and the only Canadian named one
    of the 100 most influential people of the 20th century by the
    International Who's Who (he had photographed more than half of the
    others), Karsh left behind a legacy for all the world.

    His work is in the permanent collections of the National Gallery of
    Canada, New York's Museum of Modern Art and Metropolitan Museum of
    Art, George Eastman House, La Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, the
    National Portrait Gallery in London, the National Portrait Gallery of
    Australia and many others.

    The National Archives of Canada holds his complete collection,
    including negatives, prints and documents. His photo equipment was
    donated to the Museum of Science and Technology.

    Karsh died in Boston in July 2002, at the age of 93. He was buried at
    Ottawa's Notre Dame Cemetery -- fittingly, beside the ornate
    gravesite of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the hotel's namesake.

    --Boundary_(ID_Ern+wxtHrBx5xkpFGFbeIw)- -
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