Thomas Ruff, Zeitungsfoto 241, 1991, aus der Serie: Zeitungsfotos, C-print, 34,1 x 39,6 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, d.p.b.02, 1999, C-Print, 185 x 285 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, Haus Nr. 6 I, 1989, aus der Serie: Häuser, C-print, gerahmt 183 x 274 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff's Thoroughgoing Series on the Culture of Photography

Thomas Ruff, cassini 01, 2008, aus der Serie: cassini, c-print auf Dibond 3mm, hinter Mirogard-Glas, gerahmt, 108,5 x 108,5 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, Nacht 5 I, 1992, aus der Serie: Nächte, C-print, gerahmt 20 x 21 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2011.

Thomas Ruff, zycles 3085, 2009, aus der Serie: Zycles, Pigment Print, 266 x 206 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, Porträt, 1988, C-Print, 210 x 165 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, Plakat VIII, 1998, aus der Serie: Plakate, C-print, Rahmen Farbe: RAL 7023, gerahmt 263 x 193 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, Substrat 2 I, 2002, Inkjet, 250 x 186 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

 

Haus der Kunst
Prinzregenstrasse 1
+ 49 89 21127 113
Munich
Thomas Ruff
February 17-May 20, 2012

In the first comprehensive exhibition in more than a decade, Thomas Ruff presents the work series that made him internationally renowned. The show depicts Ruff's artistic development in chronological order: starting with his first series begun in 1979 of German "Interieurs," via "Porträts," "Häuser," and "Sterne," to the series of the 1990's including "Zeitungsfotos," "blaue Augen," "Nächte," "Plakate," and "andere Porträts". The arch spans from "l.m.v.d.r." and "nudes" via "Maschinen," "Substrat," "Zycles," "jpeg," and "cassini" to the present with the topographical images of Mars ("ma.r.s."), begun in 2011. Included for the first time in a presentation and its mediation is material relating to the reception of the work and the sources that inspired Thomas Ruff. This material provides access to Ruff's conceptual survey of the various uses and forms of photography.

Thomas Ruff, born in 1958 in Zell am Harmersbach (Black Forest), studied with Bernd Becher at the Academy of Art in Düsseldorf, during which time he created the "Interieurs" series. The majority of the series' works were photographed in the Black Forest in the apartments of relatives or those of former classmates' parents. Thomas Ruff's attitude towards these spaces is ambivalent: For him they represent "the epitome of the petite bourgeoisie" from which he had escaped but which also gave him a sense of belonging and represented a sentimental view of his childhood surroundings. In the "Interieurs" series details are presented objectively and with reserve, whereby the choice of framing intensifies the character and mood of each room. Renovations of these spaces in the early 1980s ended the series.

The period in which Thomas Ruff studied was dominated by Minimal and Conceptual Art and by "Wild Painting". The portrait as a genre was virtually non-existent, and it was precisely this that led Ruff to ask how a contemporary formal solution of this might look like. In his studio between 1981 and 1985 he photographed 60 half-length portraits in the same manner: Passport images, with the upper edge of the photographs situated just above the hair, even lighting, the subject between 25 and 35 years old, taken with a 9 x 12 cm negative, and because of the use of a flash without any motion blur. From a stack of colored card stock the sitter could choose one color, which then served as the background. The somber presence of the faces and the pictorial conception of the entire series contradicted the conventional presumption that a successful portrait provides a psychological interpretation. Yet the objective and meticulous representation of a face's surface is also an indication that behind this begins a foreign, inaccessible world that Thomas Ruff believes is impossible to capture in a portrait: "A portrait does not go one millimeter under the skin, and a single photograph says nothing about the sitter's personality." This is the reason why he does not include the sitter's name, age or occupation in the titles.

In 1986 Thomas Ruff decided to execute some of the portraits in a 210 x 165 cm format. Because he found the effect of the colors too dominate in these, he chose a light and neutral background for the portraits he made between 1986 and 1991. With the exhibition of these works in various galleries between 1986 and 1989 he gained much attention. His international reputation was solidified with his participation in documenta IX in 1992 and the presentation of his work in the German pavilion at the 46th Venice Biennale in 1995.

Like his teacher Bernd Becher, Thomas Ruff is convinced that one should also reflect the medium used in the images. Thus, the portraits provide information on how they are created: The lights used for illumination are reflected in the pupils of the subjects.

The series "Häuser" was created between 1987 and 1991; like "Porträts," these images had a consistent composition: frontal views with only a minimal foreground, such as a narrow strip of street or lawn, an almost completely absent middle ground and, overhead, a gray, neutral sky. The project is meant as a lapidary view of the surroundings; nothing elevated, only depiction.

Without passing judgement, Thomas Ruff's view of these facades articulates the failure of the architectural utopia of the 1960s. Herzog & de Meuron soon became aware of this form of architecture photography and invited Ruff to participate in their entry for the Architecture Biennale in Venice in 1991 with a photograph of their building for Ricola. Thomas Ruff was encouraged subsequently by exhibition makers to photograph the houses of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (l.m.v.d.r, 1999-2001).

For the series "Sterne" (1989-92) Thomas Ruff appropriated external material. From the European Southern Observatory in the Andes he purchased negatives of telescope images of the southern starlit sky, created detail images of these and enlarged them to 260 x 188 cm. He was fascinated by the idea that the light of a certain star may first reach earth after it has died and that astrophotography captures many levels of the past in a single image.

Submerged in greenish light, the images of "Nächte" (1992-96) depict courtyards and streets in and around Düsseldorf, places that seem like potential crime scenes. They were taken with a camera equipped with an image intensifier, much like the night vision device that was invented for military purposes. The aesthetics of the series quotes images of the Second Gulf War of 1990-91 taken by the media. Back then, these images transformed the western TV viewer into a kind of voyeur and accomplice, who could watch the events without being seen.

Thomas Ruff works with found materials, such as newspaper images or cartoons (for "Substrat," since 2001), used a device similar to the Minolta Mount Unit employed in the 1970s by state criminal offices for the production of phantom images (for "andere Porträts," 1994-95), experiments with pixels reductions and enlargements (for "nudes" and "jpeg") and quotes an anachronistic-like aesthetics like the collage technique (for "Plakate"). All this attests to how intensely Thomas Ruff works on possible ways out of the conceptions of traditional camera photography. Against this background, it is only logical that, for some time now, he has been working with images that were taken by probes, telescopes and robots. With "cassini" — images of Saturn and its rings — he poses the question of whether machines can take beautiful images and admits: "I have to confess that I would like to have made these images myself, but that would have been a very long trip and one with no return." (Thomas Ruff in a film by Ralph Goertz, IKS 2011)

In his most recent series, Thomas Ruff transforms topographical images of Mars into pictures of fragile beauty. The photos were taken from the NASA website and were made by a camera in a satellite from an angle perpendicular to the planet's surface. Through their subsequent coloring and the adjustment of the angle into a human "pseudo-oblique view," they became a virtual preemption of a visit to Mars.

Thomas Ruff recently described photography as "the biggest consciousness-changing machine that affects people"; the presence and quality of photographs in newspapers, magazines, film and television have changed dramatically due to the technological strides of the last decades, and the ability to manipulate them has risen steadily. For three decades Thomas Ruff has explored this development and constantly varied his own working methods. He made the step from analog to digital image production and, above all, he has explored the mixing of both with all its different possibilities. From the beginning, his approach has been conceptual: He studied genres, motifs and techniques with exemplary character, and, along with its subject, each series brings forth its own technique. As a whole Thomas Ruff's works — spanning more than three decades — are united by analysis and a passion for seeing in a unique way.

The exhibition is guest-curated by Thomas Weski, Berlin. The catalogue includes texts by Okwui Enwezor and Thomas Weski and will be published by Schirmer/Mosel Verlag, Munich.

Thomas Ruff, ma.r.s. 13, 2011, C-Print, 340 x 246 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, nudes yv16, 2000, aus der Serie: nudes, C-print, gerahmt 157 x 112 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, 11h 12m / -35°, 1989, aus der Serie: Sterne, Diasec, C-print , 260 x 188 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, jpeg la01, 2007, aus der Serie: jpeg, C-print, gerahmt 188 x 296 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, 1183, 2004, aus der Serie: Maschinen, C-print, gerahmt 113 x 141 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, Interieur 4B, 1980, aus der Serie: Interieurs, C-print, gerahmt 47 x 57 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

 

Thomas Ruff, andere Porträts Nr. 56/4, 1994 / 1995, aus der Serie: andere Porträts, Siebdruck auf Papier (Schöller-Durex),200 x 150 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.

Thomas Ruff, zycles 3045, 2008, Courtesy der Künstler / the artist © VBK Wien, 2009.

A Closer Look at the Surfaces and Depths in Everyday Things

Thomas Ruff, Interieur 5D (Tegernsee), 1982, C-Print, 47 x 57 gerahmt, Courtesy der Künstler © VBK, Wien 2009.

Thomas Ruff, cassini 03, 2008, Courtesy der Künstler / the artist and Mai 36 Galerie, Zürich © Thomas Ruff.

Thomas Ruff, Porträt (S. Weirauch), 1988, Courtesy der Künstler / the artist © VBK, Wien 2009.

 

Kunsthalle Wien
Museumsplatz 1
+43-1-52189-33
Wien
Thomas Ruff
Surfaces, Depths
May 21-September 13, 2009

"To try to see more and better is not a matter of whim or curiosity or self indulgence. To see or to perish is the very condition laid upon everything that makes up the universe, by reason of the mysterious gift of existence."

— Teilhard de Chardin,
Seeing, 1947

The work of Thomas Ruff, who numbers among today’s most important photographers, focuses our attention on such diverse everyday subjects as people, architecture, the universe, and the Internet. With its extensive solo presentation with a total of about 150 exhibits from 11 groups of works, Kunsthalle Wien offers a first comprehensive survey of the artist’s oeuvre in Austria.

Thomas Ruff studied at the Dusseldorf Academy of Arts, graduating as a student of Bernd und Hilla Becher besides Andreas Gursky, Candida Höfer, Axel Hütte, and Thomas Struth, all of them celebrating an international career these days. The photographer strikes us as a sharp and concentrated observer of his motifs. To him, objectivity is nothing neutral though, but has to be redefined with each new photograph. The series of large-scale portraits which Ruff started working on in 1986 and for which he became known internationally, for example, fascinates us because of the determined detachment with which he captured his models that were mostly acquainted with him. This approach makes for a hyper-precise, chirurgic gaze reproducing everything down to the last detail as equivalent. It also demonstrates the degree of the artist’s interest in the history of photography, how critically he considers its subject, and the skeptical attitude he sometimes adopts toward the medium.

From his stereoscopic views of the urban development myth of Brasilia and his apparently anti-essayistic architectural photographs of buildings by Herzog & de Meuron, which are based on instructions, to his digital processing of images of the planet Saturn available free of charge on the NASA website, the artist explores the concepts of the exemplary, of objectivity, of reality, and of zeitgeist. Based on half of his about twenty thematic groups of works created so far, the exhibition examines the concept pair surface/depth, which seems to be quite simple at first sight, but reveals itself as strongly discursive on closer inspection, and focuses the attention on formal aspects one comes upon again and again in his entire oeuvre.

Right in time for the International Year of Astronomy 2009, Thomas Ruff presents works from his most recent series Cassini — subtly manipulated pictures of Saturn and its moons taken by the Cassini spacecraft. It was the Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei who opened a window to the skies with his telescope 400 years ago. He thus revolutionized man’s image of himself in regard to the universe, but also his understanding of and his way of dealing with the concepts of nearness and distance, surface and depth.

Thomas Ruff. Surfaces, Depths conveys what these concepts, translated into pictures, do to the viewer on a phenomenological level and how they challenge him. The curves of Ruff’s zycles, distorted into the threedimensional sphere, unfold the sensory experience of roaming virtual depths only reserved to the human eye. Yet, gazing at the represented motifs also elucidates the artist’s contentual objective of providing a critical comment on the various possibilities of the photographic apparatus to depict and manipulate reality.

Thomas Ruff, born in Zell am Harmersbach in the Black Forest in 1958; lives and works in Dusseldorf, Germany.

Thomas Ruff, Haus Nr. 11 III, 1990, Courtesy der Künstler / the artist © VBK, Wien 2009.