Photographer Jerry Schatzberg Takes Us Infacet His Archives

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Jerry Schatzberg

All photographs by Jerry Schatzberg, courtesy of The Morrison Hotel Gallery.

While most photographers method their work by means of what they see within the viewfinder, Jerry Schatzberg does issues a bit in a different way. Schatzberg, the 98-year-old American photographer and movie director, started his profession photographing celebrities in portraits that finally got here to outline the visible aesthetic of the Nineteen Sixties (Bob Dylan’s Blonde on Blonde cowl artwork? That was Schatzberg). By the next decade, he’d graduated to movie, incomes Palme d’Or and Grand Prix nominations for The Panic in Needle Park, in 1971, and Scarecrow, his 1973 characteristic starring Al Pacino and Gene Hackman.

His method, he explains, is to first discover a human connection, attending to know his topics earlier than ever choosing up the digicam. This a lot was evident when, after becoming a member of me on Zoom to reminisce on a few of his most beloved images, Schatzberg invited me for espresso to get to know me earlier than the discharge of this text. Whether reflecting on his work with fashions reminiscent of Peggy Moffit and Sharon Tate or titans of music like Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, and Diana Ross, Schatzberg speaks of his topics as greater than mere acquaintances. “It always works better when you know people,” he advised me with a smile. “It makes them feel more at ease, and they’ll surprise you with what they’re going to do.” This fall, Schatzberg’s whole archive, that includes his portraits of Jane Fonda, Edie Sedgwick, and The Rolling Stones, amongst others, has been made obtainable for the very first time because of the Morrison Hotel Gallery. To mark the event, we requested him to stroll us by means of a number of of his most iconic photographs. What emerged was a portrait of Schatzberg himself—an artist so masterful he may make even Andy Warhol jealous.

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“I’m always thinking of something a little bit bizarre, and this seemed like an interesting way to show a fashion piece. I walked into the park one day with Peggy Moffitt, who was the house model for a California designer. I said, ‘Well, we’re in the park now. What are we going to do?’ We couldn’t think of anything right away, and I said, ‘What do we do in a park? You read, you walk the dog.’ So I got my assistant and I asked him to get me a chicken. And he said, ‘A chicken?! For how many people?’ I said, ‘No, a live chicken.’ So he got me a chicken. It took him about 30 minutes. In New York, you can get almost anything. We tied a string around his neck, and my high fashion model was walking a chicken in the park. I always look for something that’s a little bit oddsomething someone would ask a question about. I remember one day I walked into Central Park and there was a woman sitting there with a shopping bag, about 70, 80 years old. I set up my camera, and when I was just about to shoot, she reached into the bag and pulled out a snake, six-feet long. It was a lucky photograph. But you look at a picture like that and  say, ‘Oh my god, how’d he do that?’”

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“I remember there was also a photo of a guy in this series. I don’t remember the main topic, but I know the guy was also dressed in Western clothes, but I don’t know if he had a gun or not. It sort of became two photographs in one series. It just seemed appropriate at the time to do this.”

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“I was part-owner in a discotheque back in the ’60s, and she used to come in all the time with The Supremes. This is just a shot of her alone, but I also had other photographs of her and The Supremes where they made a circle and The Animals joined them and they were all dancing. The head of Motown was also in this series, Berry Gordy. It’s a photo where he’s dancing with his wife. We had a lot of fun, let’s put it that way. The club was very popular. These people all came down just to dance, and the music was fantastic. We didn’t disappoint them.”

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“I started photographing Bob Dylan in the ’60s. He used to come down to the club and hang out there with his buddies. I’d also take him to other clubs, and the owners loved having him in there because he was really on the way up, and people loved his music. The press knew he was skeptical of them, and they weren’t very respectful at first, until all of a sudden he became a big star. But they would tell him to do silly things. And he’d put it off on them, telling them, ‘Don’t make me the fool. You’re the fool.’ With Dylan, it started out as a friendship. I asked somebody who was close to him if they could set up a sitting with him and he said yes. Often, I’d ask someone to come in about a half-hour early. We’d go into my office and just hang out and talk and become friendly. It always works better when you know people. It makes them feel more at ease, and they’ll surprise you with what they’re going to do.”

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Jerry Schatzberg

“That was taken in Manhattan, on the East Side. He was really very cooperative, so we got along very well, and that’s very important if you’re going to photograph somebody. I liked the setting and I liked his reaction to it. And of course, if I look back on my photographs of him, he’s almost always smoking a cigarette. In some ways, this was the beginning of our relationship. Fortunately, he’s got a sense of humor, and I’ve got a sense of humorsometimes.”

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Jerry Schatzberg

“If you mention Charlotte Rampling to anyone, they’d say, ‘Oh, she’s so beautiful,’ and she is. And was. She started as a model, and then she became an actress. I think this was probably taken after she started acting.”

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“I had met her before this, and I knew of her relationship with Warhol and all those people. I was just finishing one of my first sittings with Bob Dylan and his manager, Albert Grossman, asked me if I would photograph her. And I said, ‘Sure, I think she’s wonderful.’ Then I was walking in the street and I saw Andy and a female photographer walking towards me and we stopped and we talked a bit. He asked me what I was up to and I said, ‘Well, I’m getting ready to photograph Edie.’ And I noticed that his whole face and attitude changed, because he felt Edie was his property and he didn’t like the idea of other people stepping into where he should be. I felt that this wasn’t really a good place for me to be, so I just left. By the time I got back to the studio, he had called to ask if he could come and photograph me photographing Edie. I guess he felt that made him part of it. So I said, ‘Sure.’ And then another photographer, I forget her name, called and said, ‘Can I come along and photograph Andy photographing me photographing Edie?’ I said, ‘Yes, you can all come along.’ I think 30 or 40 people showed up and they were all in my studio, so I said, ‘This won’t work.’ So I took Andy, the female photographer, and Edie into my dressing room, and that’s where I photographed her. Afterwards, I got tired of all those people in the studio making a lot of noise, so I said goodbye to all of them except Edie. I asked if she wanted to go up to Harlem to see Otis Redding playing at the Apollo, and she said, ‘Yes, of course.’”

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Jerry Schatzberg

“The ’60s was a big time for change, and we were lucky to be a part of it. There were some really interesting people. Most of these people were a part of Andy’s Factory group. When I photographed Andy at his factory, it was me taking a photograph of Andy Warhol at Andy Warhol’s factory. This is, if I were to go to Edie’s apartment, to photograph her. It was just something I decided to do. With their permission, of course, because I don’t like to impose if people aren’t interested. But in the ’60s, we had a lot of freedom. The magazines were interested in the photographs, so we had a lot of fun.”

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Jerry Schatzberg

“I had met Mick in London, however this was on their first journey to New York. I don’t know the way it happened. I believe there was one other {photograph} that we noticed and stated, ‘Let’s do one thing like that, in drag.’ My studio was proper across the nook from this location, in order that they had been in there preparing. I’ve acquired a number of images of them placing on make-up and getting dressed. If you’ll be able to see the star within the window, that’s from my earlier life, after I lived within the Bronx. There was a warfare on, and for those who had any person within the Army or Navy, you’d put a star within the window. I set it up as an earlier {photograph} than it was, after which put them in drag. We all liked it. It wasn’t essentially satire, I advised them what I used to be as much as. They liked the thought of being in drag. This is whereas Brian Jones was nonetheless with them, who actually began The Rolling Stones. But I believe that they had some troubles between them, after which Brian left and Mick actually turned the star. I liked Charlie Watts, who was their drummer. He was a critical drummer. If he got here to New York, he went to see all of the jazz teams. “

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“My god, what happened to her? Where are her clothes!? Well, I had been photographing a whole series of nudes, and I thought it would be interesting to photograph her that way. At first she agreed, but then she thought about it and called me to say, ‘I’ve been thinking about it, and I’d rather not.’ I said, ‘I’ll tell you what, why don’t you come in, let me take a picture of what I’m thinking, and if you don’t like it, we don’t have to use it. But if you do like it, we use it.’ She came, we did these pictures, she loved them. So that’s how that happened. People always think that if you get somebody that’s popular and you take their clothes off, it’s better. It is and it isn’t. It depends on the personality, but she’s so wonderful. If I gave her a daisy, she’d know what to do with it. She did the whole setting up. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with any nude photographs if they’re taken properly.”

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Jerry Schatzberg

“There was a Beatles cover made, and Frank Zappa saw and liked it. I didn’t know him, but I guess he knew some of my work and he called me and told me what he was thinking of. He said he’d like to do something like that. Now, the entire photograph, you have artwork on the top part of the photograph, which doesn’t show up here because it was the basic photograph. Then he said, ‘Why don’t we ask Jimi Hendrix to come and be in the photograph?’ So we called him and Jimi said, ‘Okay.’ I think he had just come back from England. Next to Jimi is Zappa’s wife, who was seven or eight months pregnant, as you can see. Zappa’s group liked being in drag, and I think it worked out. You should see the finished cover. This is just half-finished.”

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“It’s always sad looking back at these photos now, because she was absolutely wonderful. She was so great to work with. She was so great as Roman [Polanski]’s girlfriend. I met Roman when he first came to New York and I photographed him. I first saw him at the Lincoln Center. I had broken my leg and I hobbled over to him and told him I’d like to photograph him. He looked at me, looked at my leg and he said, ‘Okay, let’s go.’ I took a few photographs at the Lincoln Center, then I made an arrangement where he and his producer and a few other people came to my studio. I was friendly with him right from the beginning. As a matter of fact, I used his cameraman in about four of my films. I wasn’t sure about his work yet, so I called Roman, who gave him the highest recommendation. That started a very nice relationship between Adam Hollander and myself.”

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“He was in his dressing room, and I saw him go over to the mirror that was hanging on the wall. He started combing his hair, and I thought, ‘That would be a wonderful photograph.’ And now I think it is a wonderful photograph. If you take the mirror out, you don’t have any photograph. Just blank space, and then an abstract shape on the side. But with him looking in the mirror, it lets everyone think of what they want. Maybe it’s ego, maybe it’s just wanting to be sure that his hair is okay, maybe it’s just wanting to take a last peek before I start to lionize him. This was at Forest Hills Stadium. He was just getting ready to go out, and he didn’t know I was going to take the picture. I saw him wanting to have his hair in place and see what all of his buttons and beads were. In a way, it has something to do with ego, because we all want to have our hair combed properly and our lipstick the way it should be, but I think that’s a very innocent and wonderful photograph of him.”

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Jerry Schatzberg

“This was a still from the film [Puzzle of a Downfall Child]. I worked with models for quite a while before I started making films. I had been very friendly with one of my favorite models, Anne. She got ill once, and I went out to take care of her. In that meeting, I learned a lot about her, about her childhood, what she went through in different times, and I really liked what she had to say. I asked her if I could just tape her and she said yes, and a lot of what we see in the film I did with Faye is basically Anne’s life, when she was younger. It was a film about models and my relationship with them, and how I’d act with them. I don’t work with that many models now because I’ve started to make films, so I’m with actors more. But actors have a certain way about them, models have a certain way about them. Certain things are expected from each. A model is expected to look absolutely beautiful all the time, and I think Faye didn’t have a problem with that. She always looked beautiful.”

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Jerry Schatzberg

“I think that was taken at Radio City.  I was just there, photographing what was happening. I saw this little girl looking at me, and I saw the whole set-up of the balloon. I just had to take the picture. I was doing street photography early, because when I first went looking for a job, the guy that I went to see had an ad in the New York Times for a photographic assistant. He said to me, ‘Well, what camera do you use?’ I said, ‘I don’t have a camera.’ He says, ‘You want to be a photographic assistant and you don’t have a camera?’ I said, ‘I don’t yet. Would you recommend something?’ And he recommended a Rolleiflex. It was very expensive for me, but I borrowed some money from my mother to get the camera. And once I got it, I just started walking the streets and recording what I thought was interesting.”

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This web page was created programmatically, to learn the article in its authentic location you’ll be able to go to the hyperlink bellow:
https://www.interviewmagazine.com/art/jerry-schatzberg-looks-back-on-60-years-of-photographing-the-greats
and if you wish to take away this text from our website please contact us

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