PHOTO:Thomas Ruff

Thomas Ruff, cassini 10, 2009, © Thomas Ruff / VG Bild-Kunst Bonn 2016, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa ArchiveThomas Ruff has fundamentally changed our relationship to the photographic image, moving it beyond reactionary ideas of documentation and supposed “truth” towards a more conceptual, fluid interplay in which the nature of what is perceived as a mere construction of reality is brought into painterly focus. Nothing has provided more fascination for him than the computerized consistency of the ubiquitous digital image.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Kanazawa Museum Archive

Thomas Ruff’s first large-scale touring exhibition in Japan is being held at 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa. This exhibition showcases 160 works drawn from 18 series including Ruff’s from his first series “Interieurs” to latest “press++”. His first series “Interieurs” comprised views of domestic settings. Ruff was concerned with capturing an ‘essence’ of these. It was while working on this series that the artist developed an interest in portrait photography. He asked friends and acquaintances to sit for him and photographed them all under the same conditions. He later revisited the genre of portraiture experimenting with swapping the subjects’ eye colours in “Porträts”. His particular approach to photographing architecture led to a commission in 1990 by the Swiss-based architecture firm Herzog & de Meuron for their representation in the Venice Architecture Biennale. In this instance Ruff employed image manipulation, something that he had avoided in “Porträts”, in order to allow a greater clarity of composition. His collaboration with the architects extended to his involvement in the design for the façade of the library for the Fachhochschule Eberswalde using newspaper photographs from the series of the same name. He was given a further commission in 1998 to photograph buildings designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe in the ‘20s and ‘30s. This challenge prompted Ruff to subject the photographs that formed the series “l.m.v.d.r.” to a series of manipulations. At the same time Ruff decided to use visual material from other sources. A childhood interest in astronomy prompted a desire to make photographs of the night sky. He overcame this technical limitation by buying copies of 600 negatives that were held in archive of the European Southern Observatory. He used these negatives as a type of source material, selecting small sections of the negative and reproducing them in large format. With “Zeitungsfotos” Ruff continued his use of found source material by using newspaper photographs that he had collected from the German press over several years. He chose to re-photograph and enlarge the images, isolating them from their accompanying text, and framing them as image in their own right.  In “Nudes” the artist draws together every type of image manipulation that Ruff has, thus far, experimented with. He accessed images via the internet and used them as the basis for departure in this series. In the series “Photograms” Ruff collaborated with a 3-D imaging expert to design a virtual darkroom that would enable him to experiment with an infinite range of forms. Unbeholden to objects present, like the scissors, ribbons, and paperclips of Moholy-Nagy’s photograms, he is able to specify the size, material, color, and transparency of new digital matter. “jpeg” focuses on the deconstruction of digital images, but the structure of the images is another element in this series. Making use of the format’s special characteristics (compressing an image too much causes block noise, etc.), Ruff gives visual a form to the structure of the images. The series “zycles” is based on the artist’s interest in mathematics and physics. Inspired by diagrams of magnetic fields in the British physicist James Clerk Maxwell’s (1831-1879) study of electromagnetism, Ruff reproduced linear forms based on various mathematical formulas using a 3D computer program and restructured them in a digital space.

Info: Curators: Nakata Koichi & Nonaka Yumiko, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa, 1-2-1 Hirosaka, Kanazawa City, Ishikawa, Duration: 10/12/16-20/3/17, Days & Hours: Tue-Thu & Sun 10:00-18:00, Fri-Sat 10:00-20:00, www.kanazawa21.jp

Thomas Ruff, press++11.07, 2016, © Thomas Ruff / VG Bild-Kunst Bonn 2016, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa Archive
Thomas Ruff, press++11.07, 2016, © Thomas Ruff / VG Bild-Kunst Bonn 2016, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa Archive

 

 

Thomas Ruff, Substrat 31 III, 2007, © Thomas Ruff / VG Bild-Kunst Bonn 2016, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa Archive
Thomas Ruff, Substrat 31 III, 2007, © Thomas Ruff / VG Bild-Kunst Bonn 2016, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa Archive