Location has been disabled. Location sharing is required to view local results around your location. To use it, you must enable the permission to access the location in the browser settings.
Location has been disabled. Location sharing is required to view local results around your location. To use it, you must share the permission to access the location. To do this, click the lock icon to the left of the address bar and release the appropriate permission.
Location has been disabled. Location sharing is required to view local results around your location. To use it, you need to share the permission to access the location in your device settings under "Privacy and security -> Location services -> Your used web browser (eg. Safari/Chrome/...)".
Location has been disabled. Location sharing is required to view local results around your location. To use it, you must share the permission to access the location. To do this, click the icon to the left of the address bar and then reload the page.
Location has been disabled. Location sharing is required to view local results around your location. To use it, you must share the permission to access the location. To do this, click the icon to the right of the address bar.
The first comprehensive retrospective of Tata Ronkholz (1940–1997) sheds light on the work of an artist whose photographic language is characterized by quiet, clear-sighted precision. A former student in Bernd Becher's class at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, Ronkholz focused her attention on seemingly unremarkable everyday locations such as small corner stores, kiosks, and shops in the Rhineland and Ruhr region. Her works from 1977 place these functional spaces at the forefront, turning them into eloquent testimonies of a changing everyday culture. But Ronkholz's gaze extended even further: her photographs of industrial gates or the joint documentation of Düsseldorf's Rhine harbor with Thomas Struth add a deeper layer to her work, reflecting social and urban transformation processes. The exhibition is complemented by surprising insights into her early product-design-oriented projects as well as photographs of architectural forms in Italy. This retrospective honors Ronkholz as a voice that condenses the interplay of design, culture, and urban space from a perspective that remains relevant to this day.