PATTI SMITH

One Image chosen by Ingvild Langgård:

This photograph of young Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe, was taken by an old man with a box camera on Coney Island in 1969. The image is used on the cover of Smith's book Just Kids, which revolves around the relationship between the two, and on how they together began their respective artistic careers.

I have seen several iconic images of these two, together and apart, but this one is still on my mind. There is something snapshot-like about it, while at the same time it's a fantastic portrait. You can see how it was them who initiated the image, wishing to preserve a moment in time.

There's something reserved and graceful and at the same time mysterious about them, as if they already know something, something great and fantastic. The picture was taken before either of them became famous artists in their respective fields.

It is of two young people, hoping to become something, but right there and then only hanging around. They wanted to document themselves then and there, and had, according to the book, put a lot of effort into their appearance.

That the picture is from Coney Island, is of course no coincidence, and the place becomes here, as often else, a character in itself: the very incarnation of nostalgia connected with the future. Although my reading is of course charged with what Smith and Mapplethorpe achieved later, we have all of us stood there, just like that, on Coney Island.

This contribution has been featured in a previous issue of Objektiv.