YOUSUF KARSH: Winston Churchill 1941
“When I am with a camera, I feel I am the most important person in the world,” says Yousuf Karsh, describing his first encounter with Winston Churchill, on December 30, 1941.
Leaving the floor after addressing Canada’s Parliament, Churchill was surprised to find Karsh in the Speaker’s Chamber, prepared to take his portrait. The photographer stepped up to remove a freshly lighted cigar from Churchill’s lips. “It was an act of reverence, as I would shoo a fly off a person’s coat before I photographed him. By the time I was back at my camera he was looking as belligerently at me as if he could have devoured me,” wrote Karsh, who took the picture anyhow. He adds, “I was very happy with myself when I left the building. I knew I had it.”
Karsh crops out Churchill’s elbow in prints—as well as most of the chair and the upper part of the wall. As a result, he says he’s never noticed the three odd-looking black lines that appear on the negative, high above Churchill’s head and to the left.
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