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Book Review: The Life Of Yousuf Karsh

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  • Book Review: The Life Of Yousuf Karsh

    THE LIFE OF YOUSUF KARSH
    By Maria Tippett

    House of Anansi Press
    Embassy Magazine, Canada
    http://www.embassymag.ca/html/index.php?dis play=story&full_path=/2007/october/10/karsh/
    O ct 10 2007

    There were few unelected people so inextricably a part of Canadian
    politics, government, foreign affairs and Ottawa life as Yousuf Karsh.

    >From his Sparks Street studio to his Château Laurier suite the famous
    photographer and his first wife Solange, who died in 1961, and his
    second wife, Estrellita (below, right), made an indelible mark on the
    lives of world leaders and ordinary Canadians through his amazingly
    stylized black and white pictures. He really had it all: he could be
    as superficial as Life Magazine, which did publish his work, and as
    soulful as American artist Georgia O'Keefe, whom he once photographed
    (top, right).

    Cultural historian Maria Tippett's new book The Life of Yousuf Karsh
    captures the depth and the superficiality, along with the wisdom,
    the humor and pain of Karsh. Making her own writing transparent, she
    brings the exceptional Armenian-Canadian photographer back to life
    for a whole new generation. And with her engaging Karsh anecdotes are
    several dozen Karsh photos-several of them rarely seen, many of them
    worthy of a long gaze.

    Iconic though he is and was in his own lifetime, Karsh was hardly
    a lapdog of Canadian politicians, who believed his photos could be
    counted on to enhance their agendas. Their ease with Karsh came partly
    because he could always be counted on to produce a posed photo. There
    were no candids in the style of France's Henri Cartier-Bresson. There
    were few surprises.

    And then in 1952 when Maclean's magazine asked Karsh to provide a photo
    tour of Canada for the grand fee of $1,500 a picture plus expenses,
    it turned out that not all the pictures were postcard material.

    "There were...some marvelous exceptions," writes Ms. Tippett. "The
    bone-chilling photograph of a child in an iron lung at the 'Sick
    Kids' hospital in Toronto. The stark image of an unidentified woman
    recovering from tuberculosis at an Edmonton hospital." There were
    photos of Canada's poor and infirm; photos that showed the desperate
    situation of Canada's First Nations Peoples.

    Not all white Canadians appreciated Karsh's view of Canada.

    "In response to Karsh's photo essay on Edmonton, one [Maclean's]
    reader asked, 'Is the population made up entirely of Indians, Eskimos
    and Orientals?'"

    But it was the dining habits of the photographer and his wife Solange
    while they were working in Prince Edward Island that got him into hot
    water with the premier and saw Karsh attacked in the House of Commons.

    The Karshes sat down to a dreadful meal at a
    P.E.I. government-subsidized restaurant hotel, according to the
    Maclean's report. The dinner had begun with a seafood cocktail that had
    neither sauce nor lemon and was not fresh. The jellied consomme that
    followed had lumps of commercial gelatin floating in the broth. And
    the rare beef tenderloin was not only less that one-quarter of an
    inch thick but was overdone. It was the potatoes Florentine that
    came in for the most criticism. When they were placed before Karsh,
    he buried his face in his hands. Equally disgusted, Solange offered
    to write a pamphlet for the premier, Walter Jones, on One Hundred
    Ways to Cook Potatoes.

    "The premier responded by suggesting that there was only one way to
    cook a potato and that was to boil it."

    The verbal food fight that ensued had the Conservative MP for Queens,
    P.E.I. standing up in the Commons to denounce Karsh as "a doubtful
    Canadian." Peterborough Examiner editor Robertson Davies came to
    Karsh's defence by writing, "We are all foreigners, in some way or
    other, in Canada."

    Mr. Davies was right on two counts. We are all foreigners here,
    and Karsh was an especially worthy one.

    --Boundary_(ID_Bjg8rJZZ2S1gyDx9N/v7Xg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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