When news broke of Diane Keaton’s passing at age 79, tributes poured in celebrating her brilliance on screen in Annie Hall, The Godfather, and many other milestones. Yet to reduce her legacy to cinema alone would be to overlook a deeper truth. Beyond her luminous acting career, Keaton built an enduring body of work as a photographer, designer, and archivist of visual culture.
She described her lifelong passion for collecting images as an “addiction,” an impulse to preserve fragments of life and memory. This article explores Diane Keaton’s visual legacy as a coherent aesthetic philosophy. Her photographs, books, and architectural projects form an intimate architecture of looking, grounded in vulnerability and authenticity.







