Powered byPowered by Gallerease

About the artist

Diet Wiegman is a Dutch visual artist who has been making an impression for over fifty years with a completely idiosyncratic and multidisciplinary oeuvre. Born in Schiedam in 1944, he grew up in a family of artists: both his father and grandfather were painters. This artistic heritage provided a natural breeding ground, but Wiegman forged his own path from the start and developed into a radical innovator who challenges conventions and blends media.

After graduating from the Rotterdam Academy in the early 1960s, he began experimenting with ceramics, glass, painting, sculpture, and installations. His early work is characterized by a fascination with decay and transience: he made ceramic objects that resembled rusting tin or worn-out bags, carefully constructed yet with the aesthetics of waste. The idea that beauty can lie in what is discarded or forgotten would remain a recurring theme throughout his career.

Wiegman became internationally known primarily for his revolutionary shadow and light sculptures. He constructs complex assemblages of scrap metal, shards of glass, and everyday clutter, which on their own appear chaotic or ugly, but under a focused light cast a perfectly recognizable shadow: a classical sculpture, a famous work of art, a human profile. It is a play of illusion and reality, of order and disorder, with which he subtly compels his audience to see differently.

Wiegman considers these shadow works not simple tricks but philosophical statements about perception, transformation, and the power of light. His installations are carefully orchestrated paradoxes in which ugliness becomes beauty and waste becomes cultural heritage. He himself says that he doesn't "invent" shadows but creates gaps in the light—a poetic description of his craftsmanship and vision.

In addition to his shadow art, Wiegman continued to experiment with diverse materials and techniques throughout his life. He created performances, public artworks, and installations that combine humor, irony, and social critique. His oeuvre is as multi-layered as it is playful, and demonstrates a continuous search for the tension between decay and renewal, chaos and composition. Wiegman has been repeatedly praised in the Netherlands as one of the most brilliant and original artists of his generation. His work is included in museum and collector collections worldwide. Despite his international fame, he has always remained true to his idiosyncratic approach: creating art that transforms the world by learning to see it differently.

Diet Wiegman is therefore a master of the unexpected – an artist who transforms waste into beauty and shadow into meaning. He invites his audience to rediscover not only form but also the possibilities of art and perception itself.

All artworks