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P17. Lifting the Mask We All Wear The Art of Photographic Portraiture WC 2151 The Holy Grail of photographers ever since the invention of the Daguerreotype has been to capture the likeness of the human face. The necessarily long exposures made portraiture at first, impossible and later, difficult for the Daguerreotypists, yet they made some remarkable likenesses which went beyond the limitations of their technology. One which springs to mind is a widely exhibited daguerreotype by an unknown photographer, usually identified as Uncle George and Gus. Unidentified Photographer: Uncle George & Gus Daguerreotype, circa 18531 Writing about the man and boy in this photograph in 1995, Taylor Holliday said: Of course, they could never have guessed where their picture would end up 150 years later. But the photographer—I don't think it would have surprised him at all.2 David Octavius Hill: Portrait of Robert Adamson, c. 1843, calotype Of course, we have seen many excellent portraits, particularly those by Julia Margaret Cameron, Matthew Brady and others from the early history of photography, but one which stands out for me is by Scots photographer David Octavius Hill of his partner, Robert Adamson, taken in 1843. Although the exposure time would have been 1 http://www.photographymuseum.com/master1.html Taylor Holliday, "The Daguerreotype's Legacy: Portraits for the Masses" in The Wall Street Journal, September 14, 1995 2 1 long, the intensity of expression and insight into the character of the man ranks it, in my view, with the far more famous portraits of more modern times. But talk of modern times and the words "photography" and "portrait" for many evoke one name above all others, the legendary Karsh of Ottawa. Karsh of Ottawa (1908-2002)3 Yousuf Karsh C.C4., was ethnically Armenian, born in Turkey in 1908. When he was 14, his family fled to Syria to escape the persecution which followed the Armenian Genocide in 1915. When he was 16, he was sent to live with his uncle, a photographer, in Canada. He was "discovered" by the Canadian Prime Minister, Mackenzie King who persuaded visiting foreign dignitaries to sit for the young photographer. Fame came to Karsh when Winston Churchill sat for him while on a visit to Canada in 1941. The resulting portrait is said to have been the most reproduced photograph in history. Yousuf Karsh Winston Churchill, "The Roaring Lion" 1941 Harry Palmer: Yousuf Karsh, 1991 Later, telling the story of how the portrait came to be made, Karsh revealed he had only 2 minutes of the great man's time and that Churchill had scowled throughout, "regarding my camera as he might regard the German enemy." When Karsh removed the cigar, Churchill placed his hand on his hip and faced the photographer, his scowl turned to anger. Later, seeing the portrait, Churchill said: "You can even make a roaring lion stand still to be photographed." Karsh called the portrait The Roaring Lion. 3 Photos by Karsh are all taken from Masters of Photography, http://masters-of-photography.com/K/karsh/karsh.html 4 Companion of the Order of Canada, conferred 1990. He was previously an Officer of the Order of Canada, conferred in 1967. 2 Most of Karsh's portraits were taken in the studio using the studio lights, of which he was a master, not only to show the sitter's face but separately, his or her hands. Even so, it was his philosophy to seek for that moment of truth, the decisive moment as Henri Cartier-Bresson would say, which revealed the inner person to his camera: Within every man and woman a secret is hidden, and as a photographer it is my task to reveal it if I can. The revelation, if it comes at all, will come in a small fraction of a second with an unconscious gesture, a gleam of the eye, a brief lifting of the mask that all humans wear to conceal their innermost selves from the world. In that fleeting interval of opportunity the photographer must act or lose his prize.5 Dieter Vorsteher, writing in the introduction to Yousuf Karsh: Heroes of Light and Shadow6, said of Karsh: His works have their roots in the high art of eighteenth- and nineteenthcentury portrait paintings - in defining and illuminating the uniqueness of the personality, in profiling the autonomy of the individual. He crystallizes his models and sets them in auras of light, their facial landscapes becoming dramatic interplays between light and shadow. It was a mark of his success that Karsh photographed 51 out of the 100 people named by the International Who’s Who in the year 2000 as the most notable people of the 20th century. A small selection follow: Yousuf Karsh George Bernard Shaw 1943 5 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yousuf_Karsh Yousuf Karsh, Dieter Vorsteher and Janet Yates: Yousuf Karsh: Heroes of Light and Shadow, Deutsches Historisches Museum, 2001 6 3 Yousuf Karsh Humphrey Bogart 1946 Yousuf Karsh Albert Einstein 1948 Yousuf Karsh Ernest Hemingway 1957 Yousuf Karsh Estrellita Karsh 1963 Or, when he grew tired of celebrities who by the end of his life had come to view sitting for Karsh as an obligation to posterity, he occasionally turned his camera on people who were not household names: 4 Yousuf Karsh Farmer by His House c. 1952 Henri Cartier-Bresson Always relying on available light7, Cartier-Bresson produced some memorable portraits in his day. Some of these were: (left) Henri Cartier-Bresson: Jean Paul Satre, 1946 (below) Henri Cartier-Bresson: Marcel Duchamp, 1968 Henri Cartier-Bresson: Henri Matisse, 1944 7 A technical term meaning no supplementary light sources, such as flash or studio lights were used in the making of a photograph. 5 Henri Cartier-Bresson: Barbara Hepworth, 1971 Henri Cartier-Bresson: Colette and her partner, Pauline, 1952. Henri Cartier-Bresson: Marilyn Monroe, 1960 Richard Avedon (1923-2004) Andy Bey, Richard Avedon, Herb Jordan at Avedon's Studio 20048 Richard Avedon was born in New York to a Russian-Jewish family. His father gave him a Rollei as a going-away present when he joined the Merchant Marine in 1942. Two years later, he returned to New York and began work as an advertising photographer for a department store but was "discovered" and recruited to Harper's Bazaar. He later also worked for Vogue and Life. From the mid-60s on, he photographed the Civil Rights Movement and protests against the ViewNam War, and much later, the fall of the Berlin Wall. In 1979 he commenced what many regard as his magnum opus, 8 Photoshoot 2004 for the New Yorker magazine - not too long before Avedon's passing. From http://www.flickr.com/photos/51267183@N00/92022505/ 6 In the American West, in which he photographed among others, grimy oil-field workers, down-andouters, and teen-agers. Cover of Richard Avedon's book, In the American West. 9 Avedon is regarded as a minimalist photographer in that he poses his subjects usually head-on against a blank background. He also characteristically made very large prints. Richard Avedon: The Beatles, 1967. (above) Richard Avedon: Bob Dylan, Singer, New York City 2nd October 1965. (right) Richard Avedon: Truman Capote, New York 10 October 1955. 9 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Avedon 7 Richard Avedon: Marcel Duchamp, 1958 Richard Avedon: Marilyn Monroe, New York 1957 Richard Avedon: His Holiness The Dalai Lama, India 1998 Robert Mapplethorpe (1946-1989)10 Few photographers have caused as much controversy and political heat as New York's Robert Mapplethorpe. Exhibitions have been closed, funding cut off or refused by Act of the US Congress, to prevent the public viewing the work of this Robert Mapplethorpe: Two selfportraits, 1980 and 1986 respectively. highly talented and provocative I would say, innovative photographer. There are two sides to Mapplethorpe: one is the photographic artist renowned for his focus of formal beauty, telling portraits and great technical mastery of his medium. The obverse of this coin is the man who thrust S&M sex and his own 10 Unless otherwise stated, the images for Mapplethorpe are from http://masters-of-photography.com/M/mapplethorpe/mapplethorpe.html 8 homosexuality in the face of America. The two sides to Robert Mapplethorpe who, by the way, almost certainly saw himself as a whole man, not a split personality can be seen in two self-portraits, the one, bare-chested and in drag make-up, taken in 1980, and the other, in black tie formal wear, taken in 1986. Robert Mapplethorpe: Patti 11 Smith,1986 and (right) Albrecht Dürer: Self-Portrait in a Fur Coat, 150012. Robert Mapplethorpe: Patti Smith 1979 13 One of Mapplethorpe's best-known portraits is on singer Patti Smith with whom he shared an apartment in the Chelsea Hotel, in New York. This was inspired by a self-portrait by Albecht Dürer (14711528). While the historical reference is clever, personally I find the 1979 photograph with doves more telling. Another well-known portrait by Mapplethorpe is of the provocative Frenchborn NY sculptor, Louise Bourgeois who is shown, holding a giant phallus under her arm. Robert Mapplethorpe Louise Bourgeois, 1982 11 http://www.postmodern.com/~fi/pattipics/htm/somwom4.htm http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/durer/self/ 13 http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/200x/2006/09/25/Patti-Gloria 12 9 Robert Mapplethorpe Ken Moody 1983 Mapplethorpe's photos are often difficult to categorise. For example, is his 1983 study of Ken Moody a portrait? It is a very beautiful study of a man with no hair anywhere on his head or upper torso (or anywhere else for all we know), reminiscent of another of Mapplethorpe's photographs, the marble head of Apollo... Robert Mapplethorpe Apollo, 1988 We get into deeper waters when we try to define the following photographs, both of which the models would claim express deep, inner aspects of their identities. In the first we at least see the men's faces: Robert Mapplethorpe Brian Ridley and Lyle Heeter 1979 Robert Mapplethorpe Joe 1978 In the second, even the face is forbidden 10 to us, yet surely it too is more personal than a mere record of a human fetish? It was images like these which brought the police to the doors of the ViceChancellor of an American university. When a student took some copies of several Mapplethorp photographs to the drug store to have them developed, intending to use them to illustrate a term paper, the pharmacist called the police then who confiscated the book from the University Library. Wikipedia summarised what followed: The book in question was Mapplethorpe, published by Jonathan Cape 1992. The university Vice-Chancellor, Dr Peter Knight, supported by the Senate took the view that the book was a legitimate book for the university library to hold and that the action of the police was a serious infringement of academic freedom. The Vice-Chancellor was interviewed by the police, under caution, with a view to prosecution under the terms of the Obscene Publications Act. This Act defines obscenity as material that is likely to deprave and corrupt. It was used unsuccessfully in the famous 'Lady Chatterley's Lover' trial. Curiously the police were not particularly interested in some of the more notorious images, nor any of the images of children, which could have been covered by other legislation. They focused on one particular image, 'Jim and Tom, Sausalito 1977'. Robert Mapplethorpe: Grace Jones, 1984 ...... After a delay of about six months the affair came to an end when Dr Knight was informed by the DPP that no action would be taken as 'there was insufficient evidence to support a successful prosecution on this occasion'. The original book was returned, in a slightly tattered state, and restored to the university library.14 Less controversial was Mapplethorpe's image of Grace Jones, but is it a "portrait"? To be or not to be a portrait There is no uncertainty in our minds that the images Karsh made in his studio of the great and famous of his day were "portraits". They conform to the canons of portraiture familiar to us from 19th and 20th Century paintings. His stark profile of Estrellita Karsh is more photographic, but still I would say a "portrait". 14 http://en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/Robert_Mapplethorpe 11 The images by Henri Cartier-Bresson owe nothing to painting and are purely photographic in their conception. Does that mean they lose the power of "portraits" and become instead "candid studies"? And when you remove the facial features of the sitter, as Mapplethorpe did, are the photographs still portraits even though they represent important aspects of the people captured for that moment? Casting back to Karsh's explanation, that Within every man and woman a secret is hidden, and as a photographer it is my task to reveal it if I can...15 we have to ask what kind of secrets and how many of them have to be revealed to make a photograph a portrait? I don't think I can answer that, but I can give you with a practical example to consider…. You do not know the people whose images have been presented here so you have no way of assessing how characteristic of the sitter his or her photograph might be. But you have had the opportunity to get to know me while I have been presenting this course: so, consider the picture taken of me by Pedro Fortunato in Lisbon in 2002: Pedro Fortunato: Bob Hay, Lisbon 2002 This is one of a long series of taken of me as part of a final Pedro's university course. this, I see a kind of imperious which I would not normally myself. photographs assignment in When I look at me, a hauteur associate with Is this a secret revealed? Only can decide if you believe it is. you, the viewer But let me leave you with one final image, this time by an architect who not only had an illustrious career as a photographer, but is also remembered as the author of The Complete Photographer and other technical manuals which have been basic to the progress of photography in the second half of the 20th Century. Himself a photographer for Life Magazine, Andreas Feininger (1906-1999) photographed Magnum member, Dennis Stock in 1951. His photograph is surely the ultimate portrait of a photojournalist! 15 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yousuf_Karsh 12 Andreas Feininger: Portrait of Magnum photojournalist, Dennis Stock. 195116 _________________________ 16 www.monroegallery.com 13