Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Spinning Churchill; How Karsh created the 'Roaring Lion'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Spinning Churchill; How Karsh created the 'Roaring Lion'

    Ottawa Citizen, Canada
    October 25, 2007 Thursday
    Final Edition


    Spinning Churchill; How Karsh created the 'Roaring Lion,' the iconic
    portrait of Winston Churchill

    Paul Gessell, The Ottawa Citizen


    On Dec. 30, 1941, Yousuf Karsh created one of the most famous
    photographs of the 20th century, a portrait of a stern, resolute
    Winston Churchill staring down the enemies of the Free World from the
    Parliament Buildings in Ottawa.

    Karsh had been forced to resort to trickery to obtain the hasty photo
    session in the Speaker's apartment in the House of Commons. And he
    had to resort to more trickery in the darkroom that night to improve
    Churchill's look and to create an iconic image of an undaunted
    wartime leader.

    This was a photo of the British prime minister to rally the allied
    nations. Within days of its publication, Churchill's popularity shot
    up 10 per cent at home. The photo was published repeatedly in
    magazines and newspapers on both sides of the Atlantic. It became a
    weapon in the wartime propaganda machine, a symbol of the enduring
    strength of the allies.

    Who knows what might have happened if Karsh had not fiddled with his
    first shot and instead of a "roaring lion," as the photo came to be
    nicknamed, it had shown what the camera initially captured, a tired,
    old man with a pair of soft, feminine-looking hands? Or what if Karsh
    had simply offered the world his other photograph of a harmless
    Churchill merrily smiling like a jovial figure on a Toby jug? Would
    the photo have energized our troops and rattled the Nazis?

    The story behind that Churchill portrait is told in detail, like
    never before, in a forthcoming biography of Karsh by British Columbia
    author and art historian Maria Tippett. Portrait of Light and Shadow:
    The Life of Yousuf Karsh is hitting bookshelves this week courtesy of
    House of Anansi Press Inc.

    Tippett has previously produced warts-and-all biographies of such
    Canadian artists as Emily Carr, Bill Reid and Frederick Varley.
    Tippett's take on Karsh is largely positive. She calls him a
    "myth-maker" and one of the greatest photographers of the 20th
    century despite his tendency to be a "court photographer" more intent
    on pleasing customers than revealing flawed characters.

    "He gave a face to people who touch all of our lives," Tippett
    writes.

    But sometimes that face, or shoulder or arm or torso, was not quite
    what nature had provided. Karsh's first wife, Solange, would apply
    makeup to the faces of subjects to cover flaws. Negatives were
    retouched to hide or improve a person's overall look. In the final
    prints, a glass eye could suddenly look like a real one; a withered
    arm could be masked; dowdy people could become vibrant. Call it
    virtual plastic surgery.

    Karsh even touched up the royals, just as famous Old Master portrait
    painters created canvases to flatter their powerful patrons. Consider
    the portraits created by Karsh of the then Princess Elizabeth and her
    husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, in preparation for a 1951 visit to
    Canada. Elizabeth termed the photographs "delicious."

    "She had good reason to be pleased," writes Tippett. "Karsh had
    instructed his technicians to eliminate every line and blemish from
    her face and from the duke's and conversely to highlight every other
    detail in the portrait. The result in one critic's view, was
    'disastrous' because the character of the royal pair had been
    sacrificed to the attention given to his uniform and her dress."

    Karsh, by that time, was world famous. The Churchill portrait had
    made his name.

    Churchill was unaware that day in 1941 that, after addressing the
    Canadian Parliament, a photographer awaited him in the Speaker's
    chambers. Canada's prime minister, Mackenzie King, wanted to be
    photographed with Churchill, so the Canadian politician was part of
    the plot.

    King steered Churchill into the room where Karsh, his camera and
    lights were waiting. Before the startled Churchill could complain,
    Karsh pulled the omnipresent cigar from his mouth and took his first
    picture, the one with the supposedly feminine hands. Then came shot
    No. 2, the Toby jug. A third, hasty, forgettable one was of Churchill
    with King. The session lasted only a few minutes.

    "When Karsh saw the first image in the developing room, he knew that
    his work was far from over," Tippett writes.

    Karsh wanted to make Churchill look less haggard, stronger, more
    solid and with more gravitas. Cropping was necessary to reduce the
    protruding, left, chicken wing-like elbow so the overall composition
    could be more pyramidal. Cropping also pulled Churchill to the front
    of the picture, reduced his "corporeal bulk and gave him a
    commanding, heroic presence that was almost superhuman." Middle tones
    were added to Churchill's face and what Karsh called his "shocking"
    feminine hands to create a more imposing figure.

    "He had to bring the buttons on Churchill's coat into focus and give
    a sharper definition to the ring, watch chain, handkerchief, the top
    button of his shirt and the notes that protruded from Churchill's
    pocket. He had to improve the tonal gradation of the picture and deal
    with the overexposed areas of the negative that had been burned out
    into white."

    The result: A tired old man in the initial negative became a roaring
    lion in the final print.

    Actually, both the roaring lion and Toby jug photos were immediately
    offered to the Canadian magazine, Saturday Night. The editors chose
    the lion. Soon British and American newspapers and magazines,
    including Life, published the lion. The photo appeared in shop
    windows, on posters and on other wartime propaganda.

    It is difficult to determine what, if any, effect the photo had on
    the war effort. More certain is the effect it had on Karsh's career.
    With that photo, a star was born.

    Karsh titled his 1962 autobiography In Search of Greatness. Indeed,
    much of his career was spent seeking out celebrities to photograph.
    His portraits became so famous that celebrities started seeking him
    out. They all wanted the man from Ottawa to photograph them. They
    called it being "Karshed."

    Karsh was born Dec. 23, 1908, in Turkish Armenia. When Yousuf was
    just 12, the family fled to Syria. A few years later, Yousuf sailed
    from Lebanon to Canada to live with an

    uncle, George Nakash, a photographer based in Sherbrooke, Que. Yousuf
    became an apprentice and spent two years in Boston further learning
    his trade, although his initial goal in life was to be a doctor.

    In 1931, Karsh moved to Ottawa, and soon became the official
    photographer for the Ottawa Little Theatre and, from that perch,
    started producing portraits of Ottawa's elite, including a succession
    of governors general.

    Karsh's secret in snagging customers was to appear sophisticated but
    exotic. He cultivated Old World manners and a charming accent. He
    wore a fedora and cape and bowed in greeting. Ottawa fell for him.
    The world followed.

    Ottawa remained Karsh's home for most of his adult life -- he died in
    Boston in 2002 at age 93 -- but he travelled the world photographing
    movie stars, politicians, royalty and others. His portraits became
    the definitive portraits of the rich and famous, from George Bernard
    Shaw to Indira Ghandi, Elizabeth Taylor and Mikhail Gorbachev.

    He loved them and they loved him. He made them look like they wanted
    but he still captured their essence and made us all feel we
    understood them a little better.

    Next year is the centenary of Karsh's birth. The Portrait Gallery of
    Canada, the main repository of his images, plans to launch a touring
    exhibition of Karsh's work. Galleries in other countries are also
    planning shows to mark the occasion.

    In the end, Karsh became as famous as the people he photographed. In
    2001, the International Who's Who compiled a list of the most
    influential 100 people of the 20th century. Karsh was there. He was
    the only photographer and the only Canadian. More than half the
    people on that exclusive list had been photographed by Karsh.
    Churchill, of course, was one of them.
Working...
X