Götz Diergarten

Götz Diergarten’s photographs combine typology and color. In his series featuring German façades, French beach cabanas, and British spa architecture, Diergarten examines the outward appearance of different types of everyday buildings. Following in the footsteps of the Becher School, Diergarten’s works are conceptually rigorous, with a documentary-style straightforwardness. Diergarten’s originality, however, lies in the fact that he adds color as a dimension to this austere concept. In his photographs of standard beach cabanas, it is the color that expresses a sense of originality and uniqueness. In the METROpolis series, he transforms the materials and patterns of passageways, tunnels, and railway platforms into abstract color spaces and fields, so that they resemble the kind of American color photography by artists such as William Eggleston or Stephen Shore.


He has had solo exhibitions at institutions such as Museo Pfalzgalerie in Kaiserslautern, Goethe-Institut in London, and Kunstverein Heidelberg. His work has been included in group exhibitions at Japan Foundation in Cologne, Internationale Tage Ingelheim, and Theatre de la Photographie et de l`image in Nice, among others.


Courtesy of Hatje Cantz