CV Roger Ballen

Roger Ballen is one of the foremost photographers of his generation.  Ballen was born in New York (1950) and for over 30 years he has lived and worked in Johannesburg, South Africa. Ballen’s work as a geologist took him out into the countryside and led him to take up his camera and explore the hidden world of small South African towns. Ballen first explored the empty streets in the glare of the midday sun, subsequently Ballen moved away from photographing the barren street scenes and started knocking on people’s doors.  Ballen discovered a world inside these houses which was to have a profound effect on his work. These interiors with their distinctive collections of objects and the occupants within these closed worlds took his unique vision on a path from social critique to the creation of metaphors for the inner mind. After 1994 Ballen no longer looked to the countryside for his subject matter finding it closer to home in Johannesburg.

Over the past thirty years Ballen’s distinctive style of photography has evolved using a simple square format in stark and beautiful black and white. In the earlier works in the exhibition his connection to the tradition of documentary photography is clear but through the 1990s he developed a style he describes as ‘documentary fiction’. After 2000 the people Ballen first discovered and documented living on the margins of South African society increasingly became a cast of actors working with Ballen in the series’ Outland and Shadow Chamber collaborating to create disturbing psychodramas.

The line between fantasy and reality in his more recent series Boarding House and Asylum of the Birds (published in the Spring of 2014 by Thames and Hudson) has become increasingly blurred.  In these series Ballen has employed drawings, painting, collage and sculptural techniques to create elaborate sets. People are now often absent altogether, replaced by photographs of people used as props, by doll or dummy parts or where they do appear it’s as disembodied hands, feet and mouths poking disturbingly through walls and pieces of rag. The often improvised scenarios are completed by the unpredictable behaviour of the animals which appear snapped in an instant of observation. Ballen has invented a new hybrid aesthetic in these works but one still rooted firmly in photography.

Artist CV courtesy of Gallery MOMO

©Gallery MOMO

Artworks in the SAFFCA Collection