| A Commission: Mies by Ruff For many decades Haus
Lange and Haus Esters have been used for the
presentation of contemporary art. Though every
exhibition almost inevitably stimulates one to
look at the architecture from a new perspective
or, at least, to pay more attention to it than is
the case with many other museums, over a long
term even such masterpieces of architecture
become invisible in a sense. Getting used to the
buildings leads to a casualness in dealing with
them which replaces one's awareness of something
special by a pragmatism adjusted to the
respective project. The image of the architecture
by Mies van der Rohe disappears in favor of an
active handling of it - everyday life in a piece
of architectural history.
The
necessary restoration of the seventy year old
buildings from 1997 to 2000, during which no
exhibitions could be presented, interrupted this
particular normalcy - a pause of reflection not
only for the institution. Also the houses
themselves were perceived in a new way. Details
came to light, new connections became visible,
the architecture itself became the subject. For
the regular users this also led to a
disillusionment, or better: that which usually
worked as a familiar background for the changing
events now became an object and became the
subject of analysis and criticism.
Anticipation
of the end of the restoration then led to the
idea to make the image of the buildings the
subject of the first exhibition afterwards. Yet
it was not to be an exhibition about
architecture, leading a didactic discourse and
for example focusing on the buildings and their
pictorial perception. The subject in this place
is still visual art, though today this term seems
to be rather equivocal. Thomas Ruff is an artist
who is interested in the possibility and
impossibility of pictures, who constantly
explores the limits of making pictures through
different approaches. He is an artist who works
in the middle of the great illusion of his
profession, i.e. photography, as a realist
without illusions and shows us what we think
while seeing.
My contact
to Thomas Ruff is based on my constant interest
in his work which since more than ten years has
been reflected in several exhibitions and a
number of purchases of different works. (That his
edition of two "Night" photos was a
rather considerable contribution to the campaign
for the restoration of the two Krefeld houses
shall only be mentioned in parentheses.) My
proposal was that he should deal with some
buildings by Mies van der Rohe constructed at the
same time as Haus Lange and Haus Esters. Such a
commission did not seem improper to me since I
knew that his increasingly complex collaboration
with the architects, Jacques Herzog and Pierre de
Meuron, had begun in a similar way. And I also
knew about his pragmatic attitude towards the
profession of the photographer. In the beginning,
of course, the end was open, one could not
foresee whether the project would be successful.
A so to speak positive handicap accompanied the
work right from the start: on his trips to Brno
and Barcelona as well as on several visits to
Krefeld, the familiar pictures of Mies'
architecture were constantly around. Again the
photographer had to deal with objects whose
"faces" were familiar because of
innumerable and formative images. As in some of
his other series of works, a genre and its
history surrounded (and somehow obstructed) his
access to the subject. Yet this is one of the
points of departure of his art in general. In the
course of one year an idea developed into a new
series of works whose title, the initials l. m.
v. d. r., only slightly conceals that it is also
about a legend of modernism.
The
catalogue accompanying this exhibition will be
published in two parts: volume one includes the
images of the Villa Tugendhat in Brno (built in
1928-1930) and of the Barcelona pavilion (built
in 1928-1929). An essay by Rita Kersting analyses
their importance in the context of Thomas Ruff's
other works. Volume two will be published a
little later and will combine the images of the
Krefeld houses (built in 1928-1930) with some
reflections on the relationship of these
photographs to the real buildings. (...)
Julian
Heynen
|
Models and Riddles
The series l.m.v.d.r began as
a commission, much as though the artist had been
invited to make a portrait of a particular
person. The items to be portrayed had already
largely been selected and the place where the
pictures were (first) to be shown had already
been decided. Beyond this what was expected of
the artist was left basically open. It was left
entirely up to him how closely he would stick to
the proposed topic or might even take it simply
as a starting point, as a premise, or just as a
background. The photographer already knew the
houses; he was familiar with them from personal
experience as well as from the numerous - many
striking - pictures that already existed. This
was not necessarily an advantage, and in the past
there had even been a stage when he felt he could
not take photographs of buildings of this kind:
"I am
intensely bored by the idea of photographing Haus
Lange and Haus Esters, because as objects they
are so beautiful that I couldn't possibly make an
interesting picture of them."
The first
thing to do was to survey the existing images, to
discover if there were any that might - despite
everything - awaken the artist's interest in the
subject matter. And it seems that already at this
stage the pictorial afterlife and broad visual
expectations that one has of Mies van der Rohe's
designs already provided a first foothold for the
photographer. The next phase took place on site
in that real yet imaginary realm which lies on
and around the axis that links the building, the
camera and the photographer's head. Some of the
artist's expectations of the
photographability of the buildings immediately
proved to be well-founded, leading him to reject
some possible motifs while he pursued others
specifically because of their very familiarity.
In other areas he discovered unexpected
perspectives and details. This all led to a
relatively manageable body of raw material which
was initially stored in the file marked
"I.m.v.d.r.".
The very
first shots already showed that while there was a
place for the large individual picture, in this
situation stereoscopic photography seemed to
provide a particularly useful approach to the
subject matter. Could it be that these two
different pictorial processes might reflect the
basic duality of the interior and exterior of the
architectural design, giving expression to the
official and more intimate face of the two
houses? At the very least this approach seemed to
contain in it the seeds of a possible structure
for the project, which of course acquired further
dimensions over time as it progressed.
The next
steps were taken in the artist's atelier. The
old-fashioned term is all the more fining here in
the sense that aside from the selection of motifs
work has been relocated to electronic
picture-viewing equipment, which nevertheless
creates a situation similar to that of the
painter at his easel. It is an intimate
relationship - with the artist confronting the
reality captured in the enclosed space between
the screen, his eye, his consciousness and the
manipulations that may be carried out using
keyboard, mouse and programme. This little
world was the scene of the transformations that
constructed new pictures from the mechanized
documentation of reality, the crucial earlier
images and the artist's own views and thoughts.
Retouching as synthesis - an electronically
powered pictorial generator of a quite particular
kind. Lastly the pictures were sized, framed and
set up for stereoscopic viewing. (...)
Julian
Heynen
|