
People of FatCat
Photography project on Europe's largest cultural center














People of FatCat
Photography project on Europe's largest cultural center
People of FatCat
Photography project on Europe's largest cultural center
A special cultural venue in Munich in 2024 is the “Fat Cat”. For a limited time, an interim use under this name has moved into Europe's largest cultural center, the Gasteig.
Until the building is completely renovated, it is available to a large number of remarkably heterogeneous people from the local art and culture scene.
The 200 tenants include creatives from every musical genre, visual arts, photography, dance, acting, literature, crafts, comedy and fashion. Social organizations and a repair café are also located in the building.
The Fat Cat also serves as a place for concerts, theater, ballet, raves, conferences and trade fairs.
With the “People of Fat Cat” project, I set myself the mission of documenting this special place and portraying many of the personalities from the Fat Cat and their spaces.
To this end, I did one year of regular photo shoots, during which time I photographed over 80 people and numerous rooms.
The project is strictly conceptual and follows a clearly defined visual language. All the rooms are photographed with a wide-angle lens from the same, total, central perspective in order to show a large amount of space and thus enable comparability.
The protagonists are positioned in the middle of the rooms they occupy and, according to the local conditions, take up more or less of the image area.
In a second series of pictures, the people are brought even more into focus. For this series, I took black and white portraits of all the protagonists in my photo studio, which is also located on site. I always chose the same framing. In this way, the faces of the people are at the core, while the visual language reduces the differences between them to a minimum. All of them are the “People of Fat Cat”, regardless of their level of fame or the activity they pursue.
In addition to the photos, I am also interested in the influence of affordable and appropriately equipped space on creative work and the impact of the Fat Cat community on the individual people. To this end, I conducted interviews and learned numerous anecdotes about the difficult search for space in an expensive city like Munich.
The collected material from this project will be presented in the large exhibition “People of Fat Cat” at the end of 2024.

Exhibition
Fat Cat / former Gasteig, Rosenheimer Str. 5, 81667 Munich
27.11.2024 to 06.05.2025
Vernissage
Tuesday, 26.11.2024
18:00, Foyer at the first floor
At 20:00 on the same evening there will be the “Fat Cat Sessions” in the Black Box with the „Bud Spencer Heart Chor“& the „Münchner Kneipenchor“.
Foyer 2. floor: „Cosmic“, paintings from Christine Heinrich.
The FatCat Sessions are a regular series of events in the Black Box at the Fat Cat with the intention of supporting local artists. The Bud Spencer Heart Chor is also represented in the Fat Cat and was portrayed by me as part of the photo project.
There are limited places for the Fat Cat Sessions, more information on the event page.






Within the scope of the interviews, I collected some anecdotes about the search for space in Munich. Here are a few examples of statements about the hurdles involved in finding good, affordable spaces for creative use.
“One guy wanted to rent out the studio he actually lives in. That means I could only have worked in the studio during the day. And if he had been ill or on vacation, I wouldn't have been able to go into the studio.”
—
“I used to have a great room, but we had to leave the windows open in winter because of the risk of mold. So sometimes I would be at the drum kit and the steam from my breath would settle over the cymbals.”
—
“As a woman who often works alone, I often felt really unsafe in winding cellar vaults.”
—
“We were housed for 2 years in a dark room, underground, under the current HP8. A mouse lived with us and, to be honest, nobody really knew who was actually paying for our electricity.”
















Impressions of the exhibition
The entire exhibition was presented in the foyer of the FatCat over a period of five months.
It featured three photo series with a total of 140 photographs covering 120 meters of wall space, numerous panels with interviews of the people portrayed, and a large banner with all the portrait photos.
After the official end of the exhibition, parts of it continued to be shown in various ways.
Since mid-2025, a permanent banner with the black-and-white portraits from the exhibition has been installed in the courtyard of FatCat.
As part of the “Catropolis” festival in December 2025, an installation was exhibited in which individual photos were projected in large format in the foyer.









Exhibition Making Of
Pictures of the exhibition being set up in November 2024.








Munich, 2023-2025
People of FatCat
Photography project on Europe's largest cultural center














People of FatCat
Photography project on Europe's largest cultural center
A special cultural venue in Munich in 2024 is the “Fat Cat”. For a limited time, an interim use under this name has moved into Europe's largest cultural center, the Gasteig.
Until the building is completely renovated, it is available to a large number of remarkably heterogeneous people from the local art and culture scene.
The 200 tenants include creatives from every musical genre, visual arts, photography, dance, acting, literature, crafts, comedy and fashion. Social organizations and a repair café are also located in the building.
The Fat Cat also serves as a place for concerts, theater, ballet, raves, conferences and trade fairs.
With the “People of Fat Cat” project, I set myself the mission of documenting this special place and portraying many of the personalities from the Fat Cat and their spaces.
To this end, I did one year of regular photo shoots, during which time I photographed over 80 people and numerous rooms.
The project is strictly conceptual and follows a clearly defined visual language. All the rooms are photographed with a wide-angle lens from the same, total, central perspective in order to show a large amount of space and thus enable comparability.
The protagonists are positioned in the middle of the rooms they occupy and, according to the local conditions, take up more or less of the image area.
In a second series of pictures, the people are brought even more into focus. For this series, I took black and white portraits of all the protagonists in my photo studio, which is also located on site. I always chose the same framing. In this way, the faces of the people are at the core, while the visual language reduces the differences between them to a minimum. All of them are the “People of Fat Cat”, regardless of their level of fame or the activity they pursue.
In addition to the photos, I am also interested in the influence of affordable and appropriately equipped space on creative work and the impact of the Fat Cat community on the individual people. To this end, I conducted interviews and learned numerous anecdotes about the difficult search for space in an expensive city like Munich.
The collected material from this project will be presented in the large exhibition “People of Fat Cat” at the end of 2024.

Exhibition
Fat Cat / former Gasteig, Rosenheimer Str. 5, 81667 Munich
27.11.2024 to 06.05.2025
Vernissage
Tuesday, 26.11.2024
18:00, Foyer at the first floor
At 20:00 on the same evening there will be the “Fat Cat Sessions” in the Black Box with the „Bud Spencer Heart Chor“& the „Münchner Kneipenchor“.
Foyer 2. floor: „Cosmic“, paintings from Christine Heinrich.
The FatCat Sessions are a regular series of events in the Black Box at the Fat Cat with the intention of supporting local artists. The Bud Spencer Heart Chor is also represented in the Fat Cat and was portrayed by me as part of the photo project.
There are limited places for the Fat Cat Sessions, more information on the event page.






Within the scope of the interviews, I collected some anecdotes about the search for space in Munich. Here are a few examples of statements about the hurdles involved in finding good, affordable spaces for creative use.
“One guy wanted to rent out the studio he actually lives in. That means I could only have worked in the studio during the day. And if he had been ill or on vacation, I wouldn't have been able to go into the studio.”
—
“I used to have a great room, but we had to leave the windows open in winter because of the risk of mold. So sometimes I would be at the drum kit and the steam from my breath would settle over the cymbals.”
—
“As a woman who often works alone, I often felt really unsafe in winding cellar vaults.”
—
“We were housed for 2 years in a dark room, underground, under the current HP8. A mouse lived with us and, to be honest, nobody really knew who was actually paying for our electricity.”
















Impressions of the exhibition
The entire exhibition was presented in the foyer of the FatCat over a period of five months.
It featured three photo series with a total of 140 photographs covering 120 meters of wall space, numerous panels with interviews of the people portrayed, and a large banner with all the portrait photos.
After the official end of the exhibition, parts of it continued to be shown in various ways.
Since mid-2025, a permanent banner with the black-and-white portraits from the exhibition has been installed in the courtyard of FatCat.
As part of the “Catropolis” festival in December 2025, an installation was exhibited in which individual photos were projected in large format in the foyer.









Exhibition Making Of
Pictures of the exhibition being set up in November 2024.








Munich, 2023-2025
info@julian-schulz.com | Studio: Gasteig, c/o FatCat | Kellerstraße 8a | 81667 München | Germany
info@julian-schulz.com | Studio: Gasteig, c/o FatCat | Kellerstraße 8a | 81667 München | Germany