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Michael Ruetz
Michael Ruetz
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Michael Ruetz (4 April 1940 – 2 December 2024) was a German photographer, artist, journalist and author. He became first known for photos of the West German student movement that were published by international papers and magazines. Ruetz covered the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia by Soviet troops and military dictatorship in Greece. He focused later on cultural-historical and documentary projects, exploring the "visual world" of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Theodor Fontane in series such as In Goethe's Footsteps. Projects after the 1980s deal with visualizing time and transience, photographing the same objects again and again over a long time.

Key Information

Life and career

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Ruetz was born in Berlin on 4 April 1940.[1][2] His ancestors were from Riga, where they worked as printers, journalists and publishers. After attending school in Bremen, Ruetz studied sinology, with Japanology and journalism as secondary subjects, at the University of Freiburg, in Munich and Berlin.[1][2] Until 1969 he worked on a dissertation on the novel A Flower in a Sinful Sea by Zeng Pu (1905).[3] He studied photography at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste with Heinz Hajek-Halke.[1] In 1976, Ruetz graduated as external student from the Folkwang Hochschule in Essen.[1]

Ruetz was a member of the staff of Stern magazine in Hamburg from 1969 to 1974.[1][2][4] Later he worked as a freelance author and photographer. From 1981, Ruetz was a contract author for publishers Little, Brown & Co in Boston, Massachusetts.[1] In 1982, he became professor of communication design at the Braunschweig University of Art[1][2] and taught photography until 2007.[5]

Ruetz was the sole heir of Hajek-Halke's artistic work and managed his estate from 1983 until 2020. He organised major retrospectives of Hajek-Halke at the Centre Pompidou in Paris in 2002,[1] at Kunstbibliothek Berlin[6] and at the Academy of Arts, Berlin, in 2012.[1]

Ruetz was a member of the German Society for Photography (DGPh), the Gesellschaft Deutscher Lichtbildner (GDL)/Deutsche Foto Akademie and the Academy of Arts, Berlin.[7] He was vice president of the Academy's section for film and media from 2016 to 2018.[7] In May 2002 he [1] was appointed a member of the Ordre des Arts et Lettres.[1]

Ruetz lived in Italy, Australia and the United States for 12 years. He settled with his family in the Chiemgau where they lived for 23 years,[3] and later returned to Berlin.[4]

Ruetz died on 2 December 2024, at the age of 84, at the Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin.[7][8]

Work

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Ruetz became first known through his photographs of the West German student movement during his studies.[3][8] His portraits of the Außerparlamentarische Opposition (APO), now part of German photographic history, were immediately bought by major newspapers and magazines in Germany and abroad, including Time, Life, Der Spiegel and Stern.[1][3][9] In 1968, Ruetz covered the invasion of Czechoslovakia by Soviet troops (Prague Spring) and reported for Stern on the military dictatorship in Greece, as on the World Festival of Youth and Students 1973 and the International Workers' Day 1974 in East Berlin. He later accompanied François Mitterrand on his election campaign, visited Chile after the victory of Salvador Allende[10] and reported on the war in Guinea-Bissau and on many other international events.[5]

After spending several years in the United States and Australia, Ruetz began to concentrate increasingly on cultural-historical and documentary projects, such as the exploration of the "visual world" of such figures as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Theodor Fontane creating series like In Goethe's Footsteps,[1][11] With Goethe in Switzerland,[1][12] Me Too in Arcadia/Goethe's Italian Journeys, and Fontane's Walks Through Mark Brandenburg.[13]

An extensive study of the phenomena of European necropoles followed. His works after the 1980s deal with the capability of visualizing time and transience.[4][8] Projects like Second Sight, Timescape and The Perennial Eye, assembled under the main title Eye on Time, document the change of the world's surface during time. In contrast to the individual picture pairs of the Second Sight project, Timescape comprises photographic sequences made over many years.[4] The project consists of more than 300 series of different objects. The photographs give a clear indication of how much people, places, squares, apartments, and nature are in a state of change. What does not change, however, is the geographical vantage point of each photographic series.[14] In Berlin, he visited 180 points in the city and vicinity up to 24 times each year over several years.[3][4]

Awards

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Exhibitions

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Source:[1]

Solo exhibitions

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  • 1969 Berlin, Galerie Mikro
  • 1974 Hamburg, Kunsthalle, The World of Caspar David Friedrich
  • 1975 Hanover, Galerie Spectrum
  • 1975 Lissabon, German Institute
  • 1976 Berlin, Bielefeld, Göttingen, Hamburg, Copenhagen and Munich, Necropolis
  • 1977 Berlin, Landesbildstelle, Pictures from Germany 1968–1975
  • 1979 Zurich, Helmhaus, In Goethe's Footsteps
  • 1980 Düsseldorf, Goethe-Museum, In Goethe's Footsteps
  • 1981 Houston/Texas, Benteler Galleries
  • 1987 Carmel/California, Photography West Gallery
  • 1989–1995 Kiel, Harburg, Rendsburg, Itzehoe, Buxtehude, Lüneburg, Flensburg, Neumünster, Ahrensburg, Preetz, Rostock and Schwerin, Me too in Arcadia
  • 1992 Potsdam, Kulturhaus, Theodor Fontane
  • 1995 Berlin, Deutsches Historisches Museum, Eye on Time
  • 1996 Berlin, Willy Brandt Haus
  • 1996 Hamburg, Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Eye on Time
  • 1998 Berlin, Galerie Eva Poll, A Library for the Eye
  • 1998 Berlin, Willy Brandt Haus, Reviewing an Era
  • 1999 Greimharting, A Library for the Eye
  • 1999 Palermo, Goethe-Institut, Goethe in Arcadia, Et me in Italia
  • 2001 Kunsthaus Lempertz, Berlin, Cologne and Bruxelles, WindEye
  • 2001 Cologne, Galerie Priska Pasquer, Timescape, a Palimpsest and The Sixties in vintage prints
  • 2001 Kunsthalle Erfurt, WindEye, Timescape – 2 Picture Cycles
  • 2005 Academy of Arts, Berlin, Eye on Time
  • 2007 Berlin, Willy-Brandt-Haus, Eye on Eternity
  • 2008 Berlin, Academy of Arts, Berlin, 1968. Die Unbequeme Zeit.[18]
  • 2008 Barcelona, Goethe Institut Barcelona, 1968. Die Unbequeme Zeit.[19]
  • 2008 Berlin, Deutsches Historisches Museum, Eye on Time.[20]
  • 2009–2010 Helsinki, Goethe Institut Helsinki, 1968. Die Unbequeme Zeit
  • 2010 Madrid, Goethe Institut Madrid, 1968. Die Unbequeme Zeit
  • 2010 Tbilissi, Goethe Institut Tbilissi, 1968. Die Unbequeme Zeit
  • 2010 Berlin, Eye on Life – Die unbequeme Zeit, Johanna Breede, Berlin.[21]
  • 2011 Potsdam, Kunstraum Potsdam, Sichtbare Zeit II.[22]
  • 2014 Berlin, Willy-Brandt-Haus, Portugal im Jahre Null
  • 2015 Berlin, Galerie Pankow, Facing Time.[23]
  • 2017 Boston, Goethe Institut Boston, Die Unbequeme Zeit .[24]
  • 2024 Poesie der Zeit. Michael Ruetz – Timescapes 1966–2023[7][14]

Group exhibitions

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  • 1968 Prague
  • 1972 Kassel, Documenta V
  • 1973, 1979 Essen, Folkwang Museum
  • 1974, 1978 London, Institute of Contemporary Arts
  • 1975 Essen, Haus Industrieform
  • 1976 London, The Photographers' Gallery
  • 1976 Vienna, Congress Amnesty International
  • 1977, 1980 Munich Stadtmuseum/Fotomuseum
  • 1979 Cologne, Galerie der DGPh
  • 1980, 1981 Hamburg, Kunsthaus/Kunstverein and PPS-Galerie
  • 1980, 1982 Washington, D.C., Sander Gallery
  • 1980 Baltimore, Maryland, The Maryland Institute
  • 1980 Berlin, Künstlerhaus Bethanien
  • 1980 Munich, Stadtmuseum/Fotomuseum
  • 1980 Kassel, Fotoforum
  • 1980 Wolfsburg, Kunstverein
  • 1981 Houston, Texas, Benteler Galleries und Rice University
  • 1982 Cologne, Benteler Galleries
  • 1982 New York, Photographic Art Dealers Convention
  • 1983 Hanover, Galerie Spectrum
  • 1985 Düsseldorf, Kunsthalle
  • 1985 Zurich, Kunsthaus
  • 1985 Rome, Deutsche Akademie/Villa Massimo
  • 1987 Darmstadt, Kunsthalle
  • 1995 Hanover, Kunstverein and Sprengel Museum
  • 1997 Bonn, Kunsthalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland
  • 1998 Berlin, Haus am Waldsee, Die Römische Spur
  • 1998 Düsseldorf, Galerie Zimmer
  • 1998 Erfurt, Galerie Am Fischmarkt
  • 1998 Hamburg, Stern, Seeing the World
  • 1999 Berlin, Deutsches Historisches Museum, Bonn, Kunstmuseum and Galerie der Stadt Stuttgart, Seeing the World
  • 2000 Paris, Paris Photo, Galerie Priska Pasquer, The Perennial Eye
  • 2001 Berlin, Galerie Brusberg/Der Spiegel, The Sixties
  • 2001 Paris, Paris Photo, Galerie Priska Pasquer, Timescape
  • 2002 Berlin, Willy Brandt Haus, Willy Brandt
  • 2002 Berlin, Galerie Brusberg/Willy Brandt Haus, The Sixties
  • 2002 Leipzig, The Sixties
  • 2002 Paris, Paris Photo, Galerie Priska Pasquer, Massimo Passacaglia
  • 2003 Bonn, Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
  • 2003 Osnabrück, Kunsthalle Dominikanerkirche,
  • 2003 Halle, Galerie Kommode
  • 2003 Karlsruhe
  • 2003 Eisenach, Stadtschloss
  • 2003 Göttingen, Künstlerhaus
  • 2003 Lübeck, Kunsthaus
  • 2003 Prague, City Gallery and Berlin, Deutsches Historisches Museum, Von Körpern und anderen Dingen. Contemporary German Photography
  • 2003 Paris, Paris Photo, Galerie Priska Pasquer, Eye on Eternity
  • 2004 Moscow and Bochum, Von Körpern und anderen Dingen. Contemporary German Photography
  • 2013 Berlin, Willy-Brandt-Haus, Puro Pueblo. Chile 1971–73.[25]
  • 2013 Berlin, Johanna Breede, Frauen / Women.[26]
  • 2014 Berlin, Johanna Breede, Men / Männer.[27]
  • 2015 Berlin, Johanna Breede, The Window – Das Fenster.[28]
  • 2016 Berlin, Academy of Arts, DEMO:POLIS.[29]
  • 2016 Berlin, Johanna Breede, Vis-à-Vis.[30]
  • 2017 Berlin, Johanna Breede, Favorite Images / Lieblingsbilder.[31]
  • 2018 Murnau, Kunststiftung Petra Benteler, Im Blauen Land.
  • 2021 Köln, Van der Grinten Galerie, Im Dialog mit Joseph Beuys.

Documentary film

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  • 2023 Facing Time, Direction: Annett Ilijew[32]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Michael Ruetz is a German photographer known for his incisive photojournalism documenting the political and social upheavals of post-war Germany, particularly the student protests of the 1960s, and for his long-term conceptual projects that make visible the passage of time through repeated documentation of the same landscapes and scenes. Born in Berlin on April 4, 1940, Ruetz initially pursued studies in Sinology, Japanese studies, and journalism before turning fully to photography in the 1960s to capture the era's turbulent events. He gained prominence as a photojournalist, serving on the editorial staff of Stern magazine in Hamburg from 1969 to 1973 and contributing images to international publications. His early work chronicled key moments and figures of the West German student movement, producing images that have become part of Germany's collective visual memory. After leaving Stern, Ruetz shifted focus to independent, long-term projects, including the Timescape series and The Epitomic Landscape, in which he photographed identical locations over decades from fixed standpoints to reveal environmental and societal transformations. His approach combined documentary precision with conceptual depth, earning praise as a master observer of time and change. Ruetz published over 40 books, held numerous exhibitions, and served as professor of Communication Design at the Braunschweig University of Art from 1996 to 2007. He passed away in Berlin on December 2, 2024.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Michael Ruetz was born on April 4, 1940, in Berlin, Germany. He came from a family of printers, journalists, and publishers originating from Riga. Details about his immediate family background, parental occupations beyond this general description, or specific early childhood circumstances in Berlin during World War II remain limited in available biographical sources. He was born into the historical context of wartime Berlin, though no verified accounts specify family migration or personal experiences during or immediately after the war in this period.

Education and Early Influences

Michael Ruetz attended school in Bremen before pursuing higher education. He studied Sinology as his main subject, with Japanology and Journalism as subsidiary subjects, at universities in Freiburg, Munich, and Berlin. Amid the political and societal upheavals of the 1960s in Berlin, particularly the student protest movement, and having witnessed the 1968 Soviet invasion of Prague during a planned Sinology congress, Ruetz abandoned his studies and dissertation. These developments prompted his turn toward photography, a medium in which he was entirely self-taught during his early years. Ruetz has cited photographers Ansel Adams, Don McCullin, Bill Brandt, and Henri Cartier-Bresson as key inspirations that shaped his approach. In 1976, he completed external studies at the Folkwangschule Essen under Otto Steinert and Willy Fleckhaus, marking his first formal training in photography after his initial self-directed engagement with the medium.

Photographic Career

Entry into Professional Photography

Michael Ruetz entered professional photography without any formal education in the field. He has described his start by saying he "never" studied, but simply "picked up a camera, liked the idea of being a photographer," and pursued it directly. This self-taught path led to his initial professional engagements in the early 1960s as he established himself as a photographer. His early career focused on photojournalism, beginning to work for magazines during this period and developing his distinctive approach to capturing events and society through the lens. By the mid-1960s, he was active as a freelance photographer for various publications before major affiliations. His style in these early years emphasized objective documentation and visual storytelling.

Photojournalism and Magazine Work

Michael Ruetz developed his photojournalistic career primarily through his association with Stern magazine, where he served as a member of the editorial staff in Hamburg from 1969 to 1973. During this period, he worked as a reporter and photographer for the publication, contributing images and reportages that captured contemporary political and social developments in West Germany. He also produced work for various international magazines, documenting the student protests, sit-ins, and broader societal upheavals associated with the "generation of 68" in Berlin during the late 1960s. A notable assignment from his Stern tenure came in 1972, when the magazine sent him to cover artist Joseph Beuys during Documenta 5 in Kassel. Ruetz photographed Beuys participating in a performance boxing match with Abraham David Christian as part of Beuys's Organisation for Direct Democracy through Referendum, and he leveraged the assignment to gain extended access to the artist over the following two or three years, producing intimate images of Beuys in private settings. This work exemplified his discreet approach to photojournalism, relying on available light without flash to maintain trust and authenticity in his subjects. After concluding his staff role at Stern in 1973, Ruetz shifted away from regular magazine assignments toward independent projects, though his earlier magazine contributions had established his reputation for capturing key moments of social and cultural change.

Documentation of Post-War Germany and Historical Events

Michael Ruetz produced some of the most recognized photographic records of the West German student movement in the late 1960s, focusing on protests, sit-ins, and key activists in West Berlin. His images captured the intensity of the 1968 generation's political activism, including opposition to the Vietnam War and broader challenges to established authority, and many have since become symbolic of the era's social upheaval. Specific photographs include Rudi Dutschke, a prominent leader of the student movement and the Extra-Parliamentary Opposition (APO), speaking at the Free University of Berlin's Maximum Auditorium on October 20, 1967, ahead of international protest days against the Vietnam War. In March 1968, Ruetz documented Fritz Teufel and Rainer Langhans at Kommune 1 in Berlin, highlighting the commune's role in the countercultural and political ferment of the time. These works portrayed central figures and moments of the student protests with a keen eye for their broader societal implications. Ruetz also documented aspects of life in divided Germany, such as the May Day parade on Karl-Marx-Allee in East Berlin in 1974. Through his Timescapes series, begun in the mid-1960s, he recorded long-term changes in Berlin locations affected by the city's division, including the Berlin Wall, Potsdamer Platz, Brandenburg Gate, and other historical sites that underwent rapid transformation after the Wall's opening in November 1989 and German reunification in 1990. These repeated views from fixed positions illustrate the architectural and societal shifts in Berlin during and following the Wall period.

Major Photographic Series and Books

Michael Ruetz has authored an extensive array of photographic books and published collections that synthesize his long-term observational projects, often emphasizing themes of time, transformation, perception, and historical continuity. One of his most significant endeavors is a decades-spanning series of recurrent photographs taken from identical fixed standpoints at key locations in Germany and Europe, begun in 1966, intensified from the late 1980s, and maintained for 57 years until 2023. This project captures both profound changes and enduring elements in urban and natural environments, particularly in Berlin, and has been presented in several dedicated volumes including Eye on Time (2007), Eye on Eternity (2008), Eye on Infinity (2008), and Facing Time (2012). Another major long-term project is documented in Die absolute Landschaft (2018), which presents photographs of a single landscape observed repeatedly from 1989 to 2012, recording variations in light, season, weather, and color to explore the essence of place and temporal flux. Ruetz also developed distinctive series around literary and cultural figures, recreating their perceptual worlds through photography; notable examples include multi-volume works on Goethe such as Auf Goethes Spuren (1978) and Goethes italienische Reise (1985), alongside Fontanes Wanderungen durch die Mark Brandenburg (1987). In the 1980s and early 1990s, Ruetz produced several country-focused monographs, many in a signature wide-format style that highlighted seasonal and atmospheric qualities, including Italy: Seasons of Light (1988), Germany (1989), France (1990), and Wales (1990). Other notable books encompass unique extended series, such as The Family of Dog (2015), a subtle project spanning fifty years, as well as thematic collections like Cosmos (1997) and Gegenwind (2018). These publications reflect his commitment to patient, sustained observation rather than isolated moments.

Exhibitions and International Recognition

Michael Ruetz's photographic oeuvre gained significant visibility through numerous solo exhibitions in Germany and internationally, beginning in the late 1960s. His first solo show occurred at Galerie Mikro in Berlin in 1969/70. During the 1970s, he presented major series at prominent venues, including "Die Welt des Caspar David Friedrich" at Kunsthalle Hamburg in 1974 and its extension to the Deutsches Institut in Lisbon in 1975, marking early international exposure. The "Nekropolis" series toured several German institutions in 1976, such as Kunstverein Hamburg, Kunsthalle Bielefeld, and Stadtmuseum/Fotomuseum in Munich. In the late 1970s and 1980s, Ruetz's "Auf Goethes Spuren" project received international attention, exhibited at Helmhaus in Zürich in 1979, Goethe-Museum in Düsseldorf in 1980, Benteler Galleries in Houston, Texas in 1981, and Photography West Gallery in Carmel, California in 1987. Later solo shows included "Sichtbare Zeit" at Deutsches Historisches Museum in Berlin in 1995 and "Eye on Time" at the same museum in 2007. His work also appeared abroad with "Spring of Discontent" at the Museum of Modern Art in Istanbul in 2008, accompanied by presentations at Goethe-Institutes worldwide. Among his most significant later exhibitions was "Die absolute Landschaft" at the Museum für Fotografie in Berlin in 2014, featuring large-format works from the "Eye on Time" series that captured seasonal and atmospheric changes in a fixed Alpine landscape view from 1989 to 2012. In 2024, the Akademie der Künste in Berlin mounted "Poesie der Zeit. Michael Ruetz – Timescapes 1966–2023", a comprehensive retrospective of his long-term Timescapes project spanning nearly sixty years, focusing on Berlin's urban transformations and the poetry of time through identical vantage points photographed repeatedly. This exhibition underscored Ruetz's status as one of Germany's most renowned photographic artists, with his archive held by the Akademie der Künste. A subsequent solo exhibition ran from November 2024 to January 2025 at Galerie an der Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich. Ruetz also participated in notable group exhibitions that contributed to his international recognition, including documenta 5 in Kassel in 1972 and shows at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London in 1974 and 1978.

Film and Television Contributions

Credits and Roles

Michael Ruetz's contributions to film and television were limited, consisting primarily of on-camera appearances as himself in documentaries and cultural programs that drew on his expertise as a photographer and chronicler of German history. He appeared as Self in a 2021 episode of the long-running German television cultural magazine Kulturzeit (which began in 1995). In 2013, he was credited as Self - Friend Being Interviewed in the documentary Date America. His most prominent screen credit is as the central subject and Self (including archive footage) in the feature-length documentary Facing Time (2023), directed by Annett Ilijew. The film, which premiered at DOK.fest München, serves as a portrait of Ruetz's life and work, highlighting his iconic photographs of post-war Germany, the 1968 student movement, and figures such as Joseph Beuys. No evidence indicates that Ruetz held production roles such as still photographer or cinematographer in narrative films or television series.

Personal Life

Family and Personal Interests

Michael Ruetz was married to Erica Ruetz, a publishing editor and translator. The couple resided primarily in Berlin, which remained his lifelong home base after his birth there in 1940. Ruetz had one adult daughter. He and his family also spent extended periods abroad, totaling twelve years in Italy, Australia, and the United States. Limited public information is available regarding Ruetz's specific hobbies or personal interests beyond his family life and international residences, as much of his private sphere remained out of the spotlight in favor of his photographic documentation.

Death

Circumstances and Immediate Tributes

Michael Ruetz died on December 2, 2024, at the age of 84 in Berlin, Germany. He passed away on Monday morning at the Herz-Zentrum of the Charité University Hospital, surrounded by his family. His wife, Erica Ruetz, informed the broadcaster rbb that he had suffered from a heart disease that had remained unrecognized for a long time and was only diagnosed late. The Hochschule für Bildende Künste Braunschweig, where Ruetz had served as Professor of Communication Design from 1996 to 2007, promptly expressed condolences upon his passing. In their official statement, the institution described him as a "couragierten und instigierenden Kollegen" (courageous and inspiring colleague), adding: "Die Hochschule trauert um einen couragierten und instigierenden Kollegen." This tribute highlighted his impact as a valued and critically engaged figure during his tenure.

Awards and Legacy

Major Awards and Honors

Michael Ruetz received several major awards in recognition of his contributions to photography and his documentation of historical and cultural developments in Germany. In 1979, he was awarded the Otto Steinert Prize. In 1981, he received the Villa Massimo Prize, which provided him with a residency at the German Academy in Rome. In 2002, he was appointed Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government, one of the highest distinctions for artistic achievement. Ruetz was elected a member of the Akademie der Künste in Berlin in 1998, where he later served as deputy director of the Film and Media Arts Section from 2016 to 2018.

Influence and Posthumous Recognition

Michael Ruetz's work has exerted a profound influence on German documentary photography, most notably through his unparalleled documentation of the West German student movement and the events of 1968, which he captured as an active participant with exceptional proximity to the unfolding political and social upheavals. His images from this period are regarded as definitive visual records of the era, establishing him as the major photographic chronicler of the political transformations around 1968 in West Germany. Ruetz's conceptual approach to time and change, exemplified by his Timescapes series (1966–2023), has further shaped the field by systematically rephotographing fixed observation points across Germany to reveal both persistent structures and gradual transformations in landscapes and urban environments. This methodical documentation of temporal continuity and evolution has been celebrated in major exhibitions, including "Poesie der Zeit" at the Akademie der Künste in Berlin in 2024 and "The Quintessential Landscape" at the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, underscoring his contribution to a photography that interrogates history and perception over extended periods. Following his death on 2 December 2024, Ruetz's legacy has been acknowledged through immediate institutional tributes, such as the Hochschule für Bildende Künste Braunschweig's public mourning for the artist and his contributions to photography. His archive and oeuvre continue to attract scholarly and public interest, as evidenced by ongoing discussions of his role in protest and documentary traditions into 2025. Galleries representing his work, including Van der Grinten Galerie, have updated his profile to reflect his passing while maintaining representation of his photographs.

References

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