|
This is the first retrospective of German artist Thomas
Ruff, one of the most acclaimed and ground-breaking photographers
working today. This exhibition covers Ruff's substantial œuvre
and presents works from ten of fifteen series, from his earliest
work in the late 1970s to his most recent.
Thomas Ruff, one of six children, was born in 1958
in Zell am Harmersbach in the Black Forest, Germany. Ruff was an
academic child excelling in maths and science. At an early age he
became interested in astronomy and bought a small telescope.
In the summer of 1974 Ruff acquired his first camera
and after attending an evening class in the basic techniques of
photography he started to experiment, taking shots similar to those
he had seen in many amateur photography magazines. Two years later
he enrolled at the Dusseldorf Art Academy to study Fine Art and
Photography.
Inspired by the lectures of Benjamin HD Buchloh and
the photography of Bernd and Hilla Becher, Ruff began to work in
a more minimal and conceptual way. He studied alongside artists
such as Candida Höfer, Reinhard Mucha, Klaus Rinke and Thomas
Struth. Through an acquaintance Ruff met students from Gerhard Richter's
class, including Michael van Ofen, Thomas Schütte and Volker
Tannert.
In 1979, to finance his studies, Ruff worked for a
commercial photographer who made brochures for the building industry.
This practical experience, combined with his interest in the urban
environment of his home town, the work of Eugène Atget, and
the architectural photography of the Bauhaus, led Ruff to begin
work on a series of photographs of interiors and buildings.
Read about Thomas Ruff in Tate
Magazine online
 |
 |
In partnership with
Volkswagen
for Phaeton and Touareg |
Thomas Ruff: 1979 to the Present was organised
by the Kunsthalle Baden-Baden and is curated by Matthias Winzen,
Director Kunsthalle Baden-Baden.
|