CHLOE Magazine Fall Winter 2014 Volume 5 Issue 2 | Page 87

CHLOE MAGAZINE Norman spent his first year and a half in Manhattan in a tough spot. Not having had any formal photography training, he was not getting work and doubted himself constantly, especially having given up the “important” work of a doctor. As luck would have it, his photographs of people he met in the streets and bars, including his remarkable images of Robert Mapplethorpe and Patti Smith, and Andy Warhol and the Factory were discovered by the renowned graphic designer Bob Cato who gave him his first gig. This would become the turning point in his career. It was to shoot images for the liner notes for The Band’s Stage Fright album. As it turned out, Robbie Robertson loved one his shots so much, Cato had the idea to turn it into a poster inserted under the shrink wrap of the album. Overnight, it became a must-have collector’s item. He notes, “I go from not being able to get a meeting with art directors to people calling me saying—are you the guy who shot that incredible picture, would you come in and see us?” In 1971, Norman was asked by Cato to relocate to Los Angeles to become the Art Director for United Artists Records. He recounts the years that followed as a shift in the way he operated and worked as an artist, “I was building my portfolio and learning how to create my photo sessions as an emotional experience. That was a big shift for me. It was not about focusing on the techniques of photography; but on creating relationships that are intimate and emotionally intense. And then I would just document this experience.” It was during a session with Ike and Tina Turner in 1975 that Norman’s own creativity and understanding of the creative process shifted. At this point, he had left United Artists and was running his own studio in a small A-frame building a few doors up from the famous Chateau Marmont. (Incidentally, today, Norman’s old studio is the iconic Bar Marmont). Norman brought a film crew into the session to capture the authenticity of creativity.