“it was nice for me. i would walk with the children and they would ask, ‘who is that?’ when looking at the portraits,” bartlett said. “it was explaining someone’s life and history. it was very educational for the children. and, when she came to cheo, she would talk to the researchers.”
the giving went on south of the canada-u.s. border, as well. at boston’s brigham and women’s hospital, estrellita endowed the karsh visiting scholar nurse program and the nora donnelly excellence in nursing award.
“she loved people, she was sincerely interested in people,” said jerry fielder, whose 46-year association with the couple began when he was hired as yousuf’s photo assistant in 1979. “i saw it first-hand, how kind and thoughtful she was to everyone.”
fielder became a curator and archivist for yousuf’s collections, organizing exhibitions around the world. upon yousuf’s death, he became director of the estate.
he said the relationship between estrellita and yousuf was the ultimate partnership, understanding and recognizing each other’s strengths, whether they were in ottawa or travelling to projects around the world.
yousuf and estrellita karsh on their wedding day in august 1962 in new york city. the bridegroom suggested this pose to photographers at the wedding.
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“she was very organized. yousuf wasn’t,” fielder said. “he was an artist, focused on his work. as for the details of travel and arrangements, she was great at that. they had a great personal relationship. it gave him the freedom to concentrate on his work.”