For Ballen, inspired by the American ‘Field painters’ of the 1960s and early 1970s, everything that resides within the visual field is significant. Accordingly, Ballen is not a photographer for whom standard divisions like subject and object, motif and background, make any sense: the drizzle and lilt of a wire, the shuffle of a shoe, the smear of sand on a wall are as important to the reading of the work, to its distinct power, as gestures more humanly communicative like a smile or grimace. This expanded pictorial focus produces a kind of animism where objects that might be mute in another photographer’s work speak in a chaotic and compelling tongue, making even the most ostensibly naturalistic image more sur-real than real.
Since the late 1990s Ballen has been working at intensifying this core of his practice. For instance, his often curiously unique subjects now perform with and for him to create images that are in all ways true theatrical partnerships. He has also worked on the environments themselves, responding to drawings on the wall and clusters of objects that become antic sculptural formations as we find an unfathomable blurring of fact and fiction. His most recent work (to be published by Phaidon Press in the Spring of 2009) has pushed this further still, often eradicating the human figure altogether to create intense and loaded subjective spaces that produce intense arenas of disease. While the figure is absent, these works feel like part of minds, as if the very spatial architecture of our internal states are mirrored by these ambiguous visual object poems.
Ultimately, therefore, the work of Roger Ballen is a form of radical, disquieting subjectivism, a psychology of the world itself that represents the inside of politics, the inside of ideology, the inside of ourselves.
Robert Cook
Associate Curator of Contemporary Art, Art Gallery of Western Australia
Related press: Direct, Disturbing and Unapologetic, Canadian Art - Raw Power, The New Yorker, Roger Ballen at Gagosian, Roger Ballen at 17th Sydney Biennale, Ballen interview in SOME/THINGS, Roger Ballen: Lens Culture’s Conversations With Photographers, Roger Ballen at BOZAR, Brussels, Dorps (1986), Die Antwoord discuss Roger Ballen, Roger Ballen video of Die Antwoord, Roger Ballen at Manchester Art Gallery, UK,
Sergeant F. de Bruin, Department of Prisons employee, Orange Free State (1992)
Silver gelatin print, 20"×20"
944 Queen St W/Toronto/Phone 416 516-8593/Email yes@clintroenisch.com/Wodan’s Day to Saturn’s Day 12PM — 6PM