In 1982 his career as a muralist started to advance: His collaboration with Harrods in London opened doors to prominent clients, like royal families in the Middle East.
He worked for Mercedes-Benz, for whom he designed the artwork for their 100-year celebration exhibition "Welt Mobil", and prominent rock bands like The Scorpions, for whom he created the computer-controlled electronic mural "Night over Manhattan".
After his move to Monte Carlo in 1995, he acquired the "Villa Paradou" the former residence of late Henri Chrétien, the Oscar-winning inventor of the Cinemascope technique, in 1998.
The villa, built by French architect Charles Garnier[citation needed] was due to after being abandoned for a longer time in very poor condition.
In 1998 he published the book "Traumwelten – Die Kunst der Dritten Dimension" and in 1990 "Dreamworlds, the making of a room with illusionary painting".
In the late 1980s Rainer Maria Latzke began to develop new techniques for the production of murals, which led to the invention of the Frescography and the CAM Software.
[2] The IOF is an officially recognized (NFP) institution; its mission is the improvement of public knowledge and interest in the art of mural and fresco painting.
In cooperation with the German Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte the IOF houses a 40,000 images archive of European wall and mural paintings.