Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Biography & Autobiography Personal Memoirs

In Search of Greatness

Reflections of Yousuf Karsh

by (author) Yousef Karsh

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Dec 2018
Category
Personal Memoirs, General, Artists, Architects, Photographers
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781487590710
    Publish Date
    Dec 2018
    List Price
    $27.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

In this book Yousuf Karsh, whose great photographic portraits have revealed so vividly the outstanding personalities of our time, writes about his own life and work. It is the story of an Armenian immigrant boy who rose to be the world's finest portrait photographer, whose pictures, reproduced in newspapers, magazines, and books, and shown in museums, art galleries and exhibitions, have been admired by hundreds of thousands of people all over the world.

 

Of his early years in Armenia, Karsh gives a brief but compelling account, writing without bitterness but not sparing the reader the impact on his youthful mind of the brutalities, massacres, and atrocities of that time. The dramatic impression made on him by his first experiences as a young citizen of Sherbrooke, Quebec. His several years of study in Boston with the famous photographer, Garo, show the gradual development of his ideas and skills in portraiture. In 1932, Karsh opened his own studio in Ottawa, capital city of Canada, and there he met Solange Gauthier, the volatile, charming, and practical Frenchwoman whom he married. Together they established his world-wide reputation.

 

Karsh takes the reader with him to his sittings, and shows how he seeks to bring out the essence of the personalities he is portraying. The reader accompanies Karsh and Madam Karsh as they travel to Washington, New York, Hollywood, across Canada and to the Arctic, and on their European tours, photographing and interviewing statesmen, tycoons, artists, actors, musicians, popes, presidents, and kings. At Karsh's side, the reader hears Churchill's lion roar, the wit of Bernard Shaw, the bark of John L. Lewis, the profound accents of Einstein. He observes the grave serenity of Sibelius, and hears the noble 'cello of Casals. He shares in the problems and disappointments of securing adequate reproduction of the portraits in book form, and in the artist's gratification when Portraits of Greatness, printed by the finest gravure for the University of Toronto Press, appeared in 1959 and the magnificent volume became an immediate best-seller.

 

Yousuf's profession has led him into the high places of the world, and this book is enriched by his twenty years of observation of the celebrities he has encountered. These are the experiences of a distinguished artist, a gifted raconteur, and a delightful human being.

About the author

Yousuf Karsh (1908-2002) was an Armenian-Canadian photographer and one of the masters of 20th century photography. His body of work includes portraits of statesmen, artists, musicians, authors, scientists, and men and women of accomplishment. His extraordinary and unique portfolio presents the viewer with an intimate and compassionate view of humanity.

Yousef Karsh's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"Through In Search of Greatness we see a man who will work for days until he is satisfied with an expression, a shrewd psychologist who can draw out his subject and capture his personality on film, a technician who insists that the tiniest detail of a reproduction be accurate; a man who demands perfection."

Edmonton Journal

"Karsh's autobiography tells dozens of anecdotes of his experiences in making photographs of the great men of the world, but the reader cannot help feel not just the greatness of his subjects, but the greatness of the photographer himself. . . . some of his skill with the camera moves over into his writing. Often his stories are as revealing of the subject as are his photographs."

London Free Press

"This is an intimate little book, sad and happy, a personal reminiscence aware of his weaknesses as well as his driving strengths. The book's deepest strengths are when he pauses along the way to discuss not some photographic coup but a portion of his philosophy or, more gaily, the fun of facing life's challenges. Yousuf Karsh's ability has indeed enabled him to meet the great and to learn something of the why of them and pass it own. This experience and insight helps to make this a good book."

Winnipeg Free Press