Recherche

Photograph


Image - Photograph
Pour © contacter :
Guelph Museums
Tous droits réservés.
Nom de l'objet : Photograph
Titre : Edward Johnson
Classification de l'objet : Costume 1940s
Catégorie de l'objet : 8: Communication Artifact
Sous-catégorie de l'objet : Documentary Artifact
Médium : Paper
Numéro d'accession : 1985.58.28
Culture : Canadian
Date de début de production : 1945
Date de fin de production : 1955
Date absolue : circa 1950
Description : Black and white reproduced, 3/4-length photograph portrait of Edward Johnson, seated, wearing a light-coloured shirt and collar, dark tie and jacket, and holding a pencil.
Commentaires : Yousuf Karsh Greatness Exposed For 60 years, people world famous in politics, theology, royalty, the arts and sciences, and the military have posed for a "Karsh of Ottawa" portrait. A sitting with Karsh, in fact, has become a meeting between two world-renowed people — the subject and the photographer. Following his sitting, Field Marshall Sir Bernard Law Montogomery of El Alemain fame described the process succinctly: "I've been Karshed," he said.In his first book, Faces of Destiny (1946), Karsh said that his purpose was to use the camera to portray the famous "both as they appeared to me and as they impressed themselves on their generation." Seeing his work as "contemporary historical documents," he cited three portraits in that acclaimed volume as meeting that objective: those of Churchill, George Bernard Shaw, and Eleanor Roosevelt. It was the portrait of Winston Churchill visiting Ottawa in 1941 that catapulted Karsh into international fame as a portrait photographer. Canada's Prime Minister Mackenzie King arranged for Karsh to set up his equipment in the speaker's chamber and to photograph Churchill following Churchill's speech in the House of Commons. Not forewarned, Churchill lit up a cigar and growled, "Why was I not told of this?" but consented to a brief session. Karsh asked him to remove the cigar and, when he didn't, stepped forward and gently removed it with the comment, "Forgive me, Sir." Churchill glowered as the shot was taken, then permitted Karsh to take still another, jokingly commenting, "You can even make a roaring lion stand still to be photographed." When, in 1932, the now famous photographer set up his studio in Ottawa, MacKenzie King was one of Karsh's early mentors. Born of Armenian parents at Madrin, Armenia, Turkey, in 1908, he remembers scenes of brutality as the Turks uprooted Armenians in 1915. Two of his uncles died. When Yousuf was 15, his parents and two younger brothers were allowed to leave Turkey for Syria via caravan providing they took nothing with them. Once settled in Apello, they decided to send Yousuf to his uncle who had volunteered to sponsor his nephew in Canada. His uncle, George Nakash, was a successful photographer at Sherbrooke, Quebec. In his 1962 biography, In Search of Greatness, Karsh recalls his trip through the streets of Halifax on New Year's Day, 1924. "We went up from the dock to the station in a taxi — a sleigh taxi drawn by horses with bells on their harness which never stopped tinkling. Everybody looked happy and I was intoxicated by their joy." He attended Sherbrooke High School, intending to be a doctor, but in working around the studio found "the art of photography captivated my interest and energy." This interest was further enhanced when Nakash arranged for Karsh to be apprenticed with a friend, John H. Garo of Boston, a noted photographer who not only taught Karsh the technical processes used by photographic artists of the period but also "prepared me to think for myself and evolve my own distinctive interpretations." The six-month apprenticeship developed into a three-year stay with Garo, whose studio became a meeting place for noted musicians and artists of the period. Karsh often served as bartender, in that prohibition period, serving people such as Arthur Fiedler, Serge Koussevitzky, and others from the world of music and theatre, an experience that led him to resolve that he would photograph "those men and women who leave their mark on the world." In 1934 Karsh chose Ottawa as the place in which to open a modest studio partly because of his early experiences in Canada, but primarily because the capital was the crossroads for many important visitors. Shortly afterwards he was invited to join a local drama group where he not only learned new skills in lighting but also befriended the son of Canada's then Governor General, who prevailed on his parents, Lord and Lady Bessborough, to sit for Karsh. The subsequent photograph was used by several British publications and newspapers in Canada. One of the first in Canada to commission Karsh was B.K. Sandwell of Saturday Night magazine. It was, in fact, Sandwell whom Karsh contacted about the Churchill portrait, asking his advice how best to offer the negative to other sources for future publication. Sandwell suggested that he get an agent. Some time later Life magazine "offered $100 which I accepted, being then very naive about the value of anything — all I wanted was for the photograph to be published." Life first printed the photograph on an inside page but later used the same print on its cover. It was then published in England and throughout the Commonwealth to become, Karsh happily admits, "one of the most frequently published photographic portraits of any person in history." This also led the Canadian government to arrange for Karsh to sail overseas early in 1943 to photograph wartime leaders and others in England. In 60 days he took 43 portraits which became the basis for his first book in 1946. These included sittings with King George VI, King Hakkon of Norway, numerous military leaders as well as George Bernard Shaw, Noel Coward, and H.G. Wells. Soon after, Life magazine commissioned him to do a smaller series of portraits in Washington. Other assignments were quick to follow. Photographed in 1932, Yousuf Karsh (left) is seen with his tutor and mentor, John H. Garo of Boston. Ever since, Karsh has roamed the world photographing primarily the famous. While he has made "countless photographs of people of all kinds" and "my personal interest in ordinary people is unlimited," he confesses that he continues to feel more challenged when "portraying true greatness adequately with my camera." In preparation, he reads as much as he can about the person before the sitting, but avoids having a "preconceived idea of how I will photograph any subject." Rather he seeks, as he wrote in his 1967 volume, Karsh Portfolio, to capture the "essential element which has made them great," explaining, "All I know is that within every man and woman a secret is hidden, and as a photographer it is my task to reveal it if I can." He admits he does not really know what enables him to capture the secret so often and, in a 1992 interview, said, "and I am not going to make inquiries. The magic and the mystery are very comforting to me. The unknown is very welcome." The year 1992 was a momentous one for Karsh: he not only published American Legends which features 73 portraits taken between 1989 and 1991 but also closed his Ottawa studio after its 60 years of existence. He still maintains an apartment in Ottawa and an apartment/studio in New York but stopped accepting commercial assignments. "Now I just photograph the people I want to," says Karsh. Karsh has had exhibitions of his work in Canada, Great Britain, Australia, China, and, in 1994, the United States. A number of portraits are also on display at numerous museums throughout the world. The bulk of his work, however, amounting to some 250,000 negatives, 12,000 colour transparencies, and 50,000 original prints was sold in 1987 to the National Archives of Canada at Ottawa. http://collections.ic.gc.ca/heirloom_series/volume4/118-121.htm
Fonctions : Edward Johnson, one of the world's leading operatic tenors, was born in Guelph, August 22, 1878. His mother was the former Margaret O'Connell. His father was James Evans Johnson, owner of the King Edward Hotel, who operated a grain business on the side and, in addition, played the clarinet in the Guelph Orchestra. 'Eddie', known locally as a child singer, received his education at Guelph Collegiate and the universities of Western Ontario and Toronto (Mus. D.). He left Guelph in 1899 for New York where he was tenor soloist at the Brick Presbyterian Church and received further training; there, he became a success on Broadway. In 1909, he went to Italy to study under Vincenzo Lombardi, the teacher of Caruso, to become an opera singer. At this time, he married Beatrice d'Arniero, the daughter of Viscount Jose d'Arniero of Lisbon. He made his European debut in 1912 in Padua, singing in "Andrea Chenier" under the name Eduardo di Giovanni, the direct translation of his real name. At that time, an Anglo-Saxon name was a hindrance to a European operatic future. He retained the Italian name for 7 years of his operatic career in Italy. During this time, he performed leading roles in Rome and at La Scala Theatre, Milan, and toured extensively in London, Madrid, Lisbon and South America. About 1919-1920, when his wife died, he returned to the U.S. as a member of the Chicago Opera Co. and in 1922 became a principal member of the Metropolitan Opera Co., New York. There, he sang a record number of tenor roles and created leading parts in such operas as Puccini's "Trittico" and Deems Taylor's "Peter Ibbetson". In 1935, he became the general manager of the Metropolitan Opera Association, a position he held until his retirement in 1950. He then became chairman of the Royal Conservatory of Music, Toronto, and helped to organize its opera school. On his retirement, he devoted his time to travelling and to the encouragement of young Canadian artists. He was also a generous patron of the Guelph Spring Festival. He died April 20, 1959, after collapsing at a performance by the National Ballet of Canada at Guelph Memorial Gardens. Edward and his wife Beatrice had one child, a daughter, Fiorenza, who married Ontario Premier George Drew of Guelph. The Faculty of Music Building at the University of Toronto was named in Edward Johnson's honour in 1959. Karsh was a reknowned photographer of celebrities.
Unité de mesure linéaire : cm
Établissement : Guelph Museums  Facebook-Guelph Museums  Twitter-Guelph Museums 
Ville de l'établissement : Guelph
Province de l'établissement : Ontario

Coordonnées de cette page web

Date de modification :