Norman Seeff, a South African who had recently arrived in New York, met the young, unknown Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe while hanging out at Max’s Kansas City, a popular downtown club for artists and musicians. He thought they “looked cool” and asked them to do a photo session. The session took place at a friend’s apartment and studio space on 72nd and Amsterdam on the Upper West Side, not a formal commercial studio.
The most iconic images from the session were actually taken after the formal shoot was done, when the three were just “hanging out.” This informal atmosphere allowed for a poignant and intimate engagement among the two artists and the camera, capturing a genuine moment in time.
Seeff was struck by “the depth of love the two had for each other.” The photos capture the end of their romantic relationship but the beginning of their lifelong artistic partnership. In one image, Smith is wearing the now-famous skull necklace she made for Mapplethorpe as a birthday present, a detail she mentions in her memoir Just Kids.
“We wanted, it seemed, what we already had, a lover and a friend to create with, side by side,” said Smith. “To be loyal, yet be free.”
For Seeff, these images were exactly what he was looking for: authenticity and emotional depth, capturing the spirit of two artists in their formative years. At the time, Mapplethorpe had not yet begun his own serious photography work (which he started the following year with a Polaroid camera). The photos offer a rare glimpse of the pair as they were just beginning their respective journeys to becoming icons of New York’s art scene.
































