How a Swiss traffic cop accidentally made some of the greatest car photography ever

How a Swiss traffic cop accidentally made some of the greatest car photography ever

Car and Driver has spent decades obsessing over motion—0–60 times, lateral g, the poetry of a perfect apex. Arnold Odermatt did the opposite. He photographed the moment after everything went wrong. And somehow, by standing still for thirteen seconds at a time, he captured the soul of the automobile age more clearly than most people chasing speed ever did.

Odermatt wasn’t an artist, at least not by job description. He was a police officer in the Swiss canton of Nidwalden, a place so tidy and tranquil it feels engineered by a focus group. Starting in 1948, he spent more than forty years documenting accidents and crime scenes on its roads—quiet two-lanes, mountain passes, intersections that look harmless until physics intervenes. These images weren’t meant for gallery walls. They were evidence. Insurance exhibits. Visual footnotes to written police reports.

And yet, decades later, they hang in museums.

Around thirteen seconds—that’s how long each exposure took. In an era of magnesium flash cartridges and Rolleiflex cameras mounted to tripods, there was no spray-and-pray. You didn’t “chimp” a shot. You committed. Odermatt took tens of thousands of photographs this way, lighting night-time wrecks so completely they looked like daylight, freezing bent steel, cracked glass, and stunned landscapes with clinical clarity.

Before all this, he trained as a baker. Health issues forced a career change, and the Nidwalden police gained something they didn’t know they needed: Switzerland’s first dedicated police photographer. Odermatt even built himself a darkroom in an old toilet at the Stans police station, which feels perfectly on-brand for a man who valued function over romance.

His philosophy was brutally simple. “A good photograph is in focus; you have to be able to see everything you want.” No blur, no drama lighting, no editorializing. Just precision. The same mindset engineers bring to brake calipers or steering racks. Odermatt treated every scene like a mechanical problem that had already failed, and his job was to show exactly how.

The cars in these photos—Saabs, Opels, Peugeots, anonymous sedans—are rarely the point, yet they’re impossible to ignore. They lie twisted against trees, folded around poles, improbably perched on embankments. What’s striking isn’t gore or chaos, but order. The wrecks look composed, almost polite, as if even disaster in Switzerland obeys regulations.

For decades, no one outside the local courts cared. Then, in the early 1990s, chance intervened. Odermatt’s son, Urs, while researching a film, stumbled across his father’s vast archive of negatives. What he found wasn’t documentation—it was art. Quiet, absurd, tragic, sometimes darkly funny art that spoke volumes about cars, roads, and the fragile pact between humans and machines.

The international art world agreed. In 2001, legendary curator Harald Szeemann selected 32 photographs from Odermatt’s Karambolage series for the Venice Biennale. From there, the exhibitions snowballed—Paris, New York, beyond. The retired traffic cop became an internationally recognized artist without ever changing how he worked. Same photos. New audience.

Odermatt lived long enough to enjoy it. He died in 2021 at 95, having watched the ordinary work of his career become extraordinary in hindsight. Today, his photographs reside in museum collections around the world, time capsules from an era when cars were simpler, roads were quieter, and consequences were still very real.

On what would have been his 100th birthday, Berlin’s Springer Gallery is marking the milestone with a major exhibition running through January 31, 2026. It’s a fitting tribute—not just to a photographer, but to an accidental historian of the automobile.

Because if you really want to understand cars, don’t just look at how they move. Look at how they stop.

Source: Galerie Springer Berlin