
October 2009








Washington Diplomat
P.O. Box 1345
Silver Spring, MD 20915
Tel: 301.933.3552
Fax: 301.949.0065


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Photography
Karsh Sheds Glorious Light on Yesteryears Faces of Fame
by Michael Coleman
The Canadian Embassy on Pennsylvania Avenue is a monument of light. Its white granite exterior gleams brilliantly under the Washington sun, and its towering windows funnel those rays into the buildings expansive lobby.
But step into the recessed space just off the first floor, and the light dissipates into a softly dim gallery of cool. Here, the National Gallery of Canada has mounted the exhibition Karsh at 100: Portraits of Artists. The small collection of 28 black-and-white photographs celebrates some of Yousuf Karshs most enduring portraits. A virtual whos-who of painters, actors, fashion designers, musicians and writers from the 20th century, the exhibition renders such outsize personalities as Ernest Hemingway, Georgia OKeeffe and Joan Crawford in gloriously intimate detail.
But instead of stripping away the gloss of fame, Karsh amplifies it. An Armenian native who immigrated to Ottawa early in life, Karsh spent a lifetime reverently capturing celebrity through his lens. And in many of these photographs, he manages to uncover some new detail or mood in images of people who had been photographed hundreds of times.
Weve all heard the name Picasso, for example, all of our lives. But how many times have you looked at really studied the man, himself? Karsh allows us to gaze at the now immortal painter, who stares straight ahead, looking like a tightly coiled ball of energy, replete with a cigarette, of course.
Andy Warhol the Pittsburgh-born artist who manipulated fame brilliantly with his enigmatic statements and poses in 1970s New York strikes an unusually hammy pose as he half-pouts, half-smiles while raising a paintbrush to his face.
Karsh captures Hemingway in Havana at his vital, bearish best. The iconic writers shot is closely cropped, imbuing the image with his immense physicality, his outsize humanity etched across his weathered face.
OKeeffe, by contrast, is photographed in repose, most likely at her remote Ghost Ranch retreat in New Mexico. Ever elusive and often cryptic, OKeeffes gaze is slightly askance as shadows dance across the studio and just a hint of light intrudes from a window.
Similarly matching personality to subject, a photograph of dancer Martha Graham is all sinew and coil. The dance divas gaze suggests nothing that approaches friendly, but it reminds us that hers is hard work and not just anyone in fact pretty much no one could do it as well as she.
Portraits of Artists shows Karshs creativity in capturing the artistic character of his subjects, said curator Ann Thomas of the National Gallery of Canada. The subjects are complex and playful, often combining the creators and their artwork in a lively visual relationship.
Yet Karsh who died in 2002 at 93 never let that lively relationship overshadow the deep sense of reverence he showed his subjects. Part of Karshs brilliance was that he photographed people as we would want to believe they were, not necessarily as they were. His interpretations, flawlessly rendered on silvery paper, allow us to luxuriate in the seemingly untouchable personas of those we once worshiped and still can.
Michael Coleman is a contributing writer for The Washington Diplomat.
Karsh at 100: Portraits of Artists
through Dec. 18
Embassy of Canada
501 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
For more information, please call (202) 682-1740 or visit www.canadianembassy.org.

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