Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/02/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Leica M Y Canon EOS N Macintosh N Left eyed N Left handed N Plus the bonus points. On 11 Feb 98 at 0:16, ted grant wrote: > > What is it with you Armenian's and photography? :) > > We have the classic portrait photographer Yousf Karsh and his > equally as great, but lesser known brother Malak, Michael Hintlian > in Boston a super Leica shooter with his big exhibition opening on > wednesday evening (11 Feb) in Boston, yourself and I probably have > any number of other photographer aquaintences of the same ethnic > background. > > What did you get brought up on, Kodak crunchies? :) Or Fuji crackle > snap and pop flakes? :) Well, it's history lesson time. The Armenians were prominent in the 19th century photography business in the east. The accursed Abdul Hamid II presented the Library of Congress with a number of albums of photographs done by Armenian photographers. Susan Meiselas' book on Kurdistan contains an example of the work of the photographer Sevruguin who had a studio in Teheran. The Ellis Island exhibit on the Armenians includes a photograph from the studio of Dildilian whose son was a photographer in US. And more recently, Photo District News carried a front page article a couple of years ago about Ara Guler, an Armenian photographer based in Istanbul who had just published a monograph - impossible to find in this country - of photographs of that city. Roy C. Zartarian http://www.connix.com/~royzart "A prophet is not without honor except in his own land and among his own people" Written with the assistance of a labrador retriever whose chin is on the key board. All typos are his fault.