Joseph Jefferson: American Actor

Joseph Jefferson: American Actor

John H. Garo of Boston

One of the greatest photographers in the history of the art” – Yousef Karsh (1.)

John Higue Garo: 1870–1939

It’s not known precisely when Armenian immigrant John Garo arrived in America after his birth around 1868 or 1870 in Ottoman Armenia, although his obituary states he was 14.  In reporting by author Mehmed Ali for his superb 2016 volume Yousuf Karsh & John Garo: The Search for a Master’s Legacy, Garo first landed in Worcester, MA where he initially worked making barbed wire in one of the city’s mills. By 1889, Garo had traveled to Boston in search of more greener pastures and the following year found a position as an artist with the Beckford Photo Studio at 43 Winter Street near Boston Common.” (2.)

Earlier in the introduction to the book, Jerry Fielder of the Karsh Estate wrote of the man Garo would become and the profession he would soon redefine: John Garo was a renaissance man with many colors on his palette. He was an accomplished painter who embraced the modern age to become an extraordinary photographer. He was a rakish raconteur. He was dapper with more than a dash of dandy. He was an aesthete but also an athlete. He was an intellectual with an uninhibited sense of fun. He was impulsive at parties but took his friendships seriously. He was above all an artist with a palpable love of life and a focused devotion to his work.” (3.) 

Similarly laudatory, a press release from Benna Books sent to this archive in December, 2015 before the books publication weighed in with the following, revealing the renaissance nature of Garo’s many talents, and reason enough today to keep his flame alive today:

When President Calvin Coolidge was asked to choose between the artist John Singer Sargent or the photographer John Garo to make his official presidential portrait, Coolidge chose Garo. Although unknown today, in the early years of the twentieth century, Garo was a nationally acclaimed photographer, a leader in the thriving Boston photographic community. Cultured and charming, Garo also painted watercolors, wrote poetry and counted among his friends luminaries in the worlds of music and theater. (4.)

In 1974, Yousef Karsh wrote of his passion for preserving the archive of his mentor, with the majority of it still not located today. Perhaps those reading the following might inspire some future sleuthing to bring additional of Garo’s works to light for future audiences? 

After Garo’s death I was saddened to learn that much of his work was dispersed, which meant that the sum of his life’s accomplishment was fragmented. For many years, I have been trying to get his work together so that the rest of the world may see and enjoy his art. I have long cherished the idea of gathering his prints and presenting them to a museum which would treasure them, and having an exhibition of his work. It would be a great pity to have his prints locked away where no one could enjoy them—especially the younger generation of photographers, who could benefit from his vision. (5.)

The following 1939 obituary clipping for Garo, most likely from a Boston newspaper, fills in additional details:

John H. Garo, Noted Boston Photographer, Dies in Hospital

The funeral of John H. Garo, an Armenian immigrant who has long been regarded as one of the master photographers of America, will be tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 at Waterman’s undertaking parlors, 497 Commonwealth av. Mr. Garo died yesterday morning at the City Hospital.

He was born in Horpoot, Armenia, the son of a Congregational minister and a direct descendant of five centuries of clergymen. At the age of 14 he came to this country and went to Worcester, where he obtained his first work illustrating valentines. A few years later he became a photographer’s apprentice in Boston. He studied at night, specializing in English and in painting. He gained a wide reputation as a landscape artist, but he was best known as a photographer.

In a class by himself in the realm of artistic photography, Garo for more than 40 years won many photographic honors in this country. He also won international reputation through exhibits in salons abroad. One of his best-known pictures was that of Calvin Coolidge, a favorite of Mrs. Coolidge, which was hung in the White House.

He won the gold medal offered by the Photographers Association of New England in 1914 for his portrait of George Bartlett, superintendent of the Boston Normal Art School. His skill won him many commissions from socially prominent persons and high officials.

He was among the pioneers in the development of photography who successfully used artificial aids for improving the effects. A great influence in the camera clubs of this city for more than 30 years–as a critic and adviser–he was ever ready to experiment with new equipment that would bring out the real art and beauty in photographic work.

Many of his paintings have hung in exhibition at his gallery at 739 Boylston st., and at the Boston City Club. He leaves his wife. They lived at 83 Perkins st., Jamaica Plain.

                        

  1. Excerpt: In Search of Greatness: Reflections of Yousuf Karsh, By Yousef Karsh, University of Toronto Press, 1962
  2. Excerpt:, Mehmed Ali: Yousuf Karsh & John Garo: The Search for a Master’s Legacy, Benna Books, 2016, p. 35
  3. Ibid, From the Introduction by Jerry Fielder, p. 10.
  4. Benna Books, An Imprint of Applewood Books Inc. Carlisle, Massachusetts, Press release, December, 2015: Yousuf Karsh & John Garo – The Search for a Master’s Legacy, ISBN: 978-1-944038-00-7
  5. Excerpt:, Mehmed Ali: Yousuf Karsh & John Garo: The Search for a Master’s Legacy, Benna Books, 2016, p. 154

                        

Joseph Jefferson: 1829-1905

Joseph Jefferson III (February 20, 1829 – April 23, 1905), often known as Joe Jefferson, was an American actor. He was the third actor of this name in a family of actors and managers, and one of the most famous 19th century American comedians. Beginning as a young child, he continued as a performer for most of his 76 years. Jefferson was particularly well known for his adaptation and portrayal of Rip Van Winkle on the stage, reprising the role in several silent film adaptations. After 1865, he created no other major role and toured with this play for decades.

Life and career

Jefferson was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.His father, Joseph Jefferson Jr., was a scenic designer and actor and his mother an actress. He appeared onstage early in life, often being used when a play called for “a babe in arms”. His first recorded appearance was at the Washington Theatre in Washington, D.C., where he appeared in a benefit performance for the minstrel Thomas D. Rice.

Jefferson was married twice: at the age of 21 in 1850, to actress Margaret Clements Lockyer (1832–1861), who died young after bearing their four children. After Jefferson returned to the United States after the end of the Civil War, he married again in 1867 to Sarah Warren. She was the niece of British-American actor William Warren.  Wikipedia (2024) continues…

Title
Joseph Jefferson: American Actor
Photographer
Journal
Country
Medium
Atelier
Year
Dimensions

Image Dimensions19.8 x 14.8 cm Lieferung 3 | Third Issue

Support Dimensions34.9 x 26.5 cm cropped to plate marks

Print Notes

Recto: engraved: u.l.: Die Kunst in der Photographie 1904.; u.r.: Verlag von Wilhelm Knapp in Halle a/S.; l.l.: Garo. Boston.; title, centered, lower margin: JOSEPH JEFFERSON.; l.r.: Meisenbach Riffarth & Co., hel. u. impr.signed by the artist in the plate at l.r.: Copyright By The Garo Studio 1902 Boston; non-printed loose tissue guard.

Exhibitions | Collections

Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. photographic print variant: Joseph Jefferson, Creator(s): Garo, John H., 1870-1939, photographer, Date Created/Published: c1902 Oct. 13., H22523 U.S. Copyright Office.

 

Published

The Vollgros Collection of Masterpieces of American Photographs, 1903, photogravure, Portrait of Mr. Joseph Jefferson, John H. Garo

Photo Era, The American Journal of Photography, Boston, May, 1903, full-page halftone, Portrait of Joseph Jefferson by Garo, unpaginated.

Art in Photography, Photo Era Publishing Company, Boston: 1905: photogravure: Joseph Jefferson, Garo, Boston.