Born in Zurich in 1921, Karlheinz Weinberger began to take pictures as a teenager and became a member of the Bund der Naturfreunde photography club where he
improved his technique. In the 40s, he joined the famous Zürich underground gay club “Der Kreis” and began to publish his photos in its magazine under the
pseudonym of Jim. In the late 50s, he met young misfits on the street and began to photograph them, in studio at his mother’s apartment or during their trips in the
Swiss countryside. Working all his life as a warehouseman for the Siemens factory, he devoted all his spare time to his photographic passion for eccentricity. For more
than thirty years, Karlheinz Weinberger followed these young people, who reused the codes of Rebel Without a Cause and created inventive and provocative outfits.
His series in black and white and colour follow rockers, bikers and tattooed misfits and offer an amazing portrait of underground Switzerland. This work of a lifetime
show, with boldness, kindness and a touch of irony, a post-war generation searching for its identity. Revealed shortly before his death in 2006, the work of Karlheinz
Weinberger has ever since been exhibited around the world and resulted in numerous publications. The Galerie Esther Woerdehoff owns the estate and works to uncover it. On 2017, a large retrospective exhibition took place in Les Rencontres d’Arles, along with a book published by Steidl.