Turin

Thomas Ruff, Zycles 3042, 2008, ink-jet print, 7' 6 1/2“ x 13' 1 1/2”.

Thomas Ruff, Zycles 3042, 2008, ink-jet print, 7' 6 1/2“ x 13' 1 1/2”.

Turin

Thomas Ruff

Castello di Rivoli
Piazza Mafalda di Savoia
March 16–June 21, 2009

Curated by Giorgio Verzotti

Wunderkind of Bernd and Hilla Becher, Thomas Ruff began his practice in the 1970s tuned to the objective and analytic tendencies of German photography—that is, with views congenial to Minimalism and Conceptualism. Always probing the technical boundaries of his medium, Ruff has since the 1990s applied digital correction to such hyperrationalist efforts, “inventing” documentary images at their most perfect standardization. Castello di Rivoli presents some eighty works—many from the artist’s later series, including the teasingly blurred pornographic “nudes” affiliated with Michel Houellebecq’s erotic writings and the early paintings of Gerhard Richter. However, older work will also be on view, hung in proximity to his recent, uncharacteristically glossy “Substrat” abstractions (2001–2005), and no doubt defend the traditional course Ruff once so remarkably maintained.