Me too, I did not like how Karsh placed the hands in a lot of his work, looked very contrived. Though admittedly the image of Winston Churchill is fantastic as well Hemingway with big sweater.I've always thought Karsh was kind of dull. Looking at Karsh's work all together like that kinda reinforces my thoughts. He photographed a lot of famous people in a very safe way. It is interesting that Parker used the word "anodyne" since that is how I would describe Karsh's work, at least compared to what came after him. I much prefer Penn or Avedon, both of whose portraits had depth. I actually see the person in a Penn or Avedon portrait.
It is interesting that Parker used the word "anodyne" since that is how I would describe Karsh's work, at least compared to what came after him. I much prefer Penn or Avedon, both of whose portraits had depth. I actually see the person in a Penn or Avedon portrait.
Wow, the Yousuf Karsh archive has just updated their website and it is absolutely amazing. Early work, a searchable database, biography, interviews, audio.
One astonishing fact is that Karsh did over 15,000(!) portrait sessions.
To me, this is what great photography is about. It's an electric thrill, not just another passive, jaded, anodyne glimpse of the world. Bravo!
he started in the 20s ... and stopped in the 80s ...15,000 sessions? If he averaged one portrait session per day, that would take 41 years.
A story that he told in person to great effect!I've always loved the iconic Churchill portrait and the story behind it.
Or 2 sessions aday would only be 10years. Still thats a lot.15,000 sessions? If he averaged one portrait session per day, that would take 41 years.
Please tell us!I really liked the pages with his handwritten developer and chemical recipes: http://karsh.org/developer-formulae/
I was sorry to see that there is no reference to his encounter with my Dad.
Some/many people like "The Decisive Moment". Me, I like Karsh. I grew up admiring most of the people he photographed (at least for the books that I own). Some of the people, I did not like, but they all seemed interesting to Karsh and it shows in his portraits.........Regards!
My father started work at Canadian Kodak shortly after leaving the Canadian Air Force in 1947.Please tell us!
Based on the original quote of one session per day taking 41 years, isn't 2 sessions per day 20.5 yearsOr 2 sessions aday would only be 10years. Still thats a lot.
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