WASHINGTON, DC.- Roger Ballen (b. 1950), one of the more recognized photographic artists working today, is the focus of an exhibition at the
Smithsonians National Museum of African Art. On view from June 19 through Feb. 9, 2014, Lines, Marks, and Drawings: Through the Lens of Roger Ballen considers the artists 40-plus years as a professional photographer through a new approach: an examination of line and drawing in his photographs.
The exhibition features 55 works and one video and traces Ballens use of drawing in his photographs over the past four decades. Ballens early vintage silver-gelatin photographs show a minimal approach to line. Selected works from Ballens most recent series, Asylum of the Birds (20082014), show how the artist more directly integrates drawing into theatrical settings dominated by birds. Developed by guest curator and artist Craig Allen Subler, the exhibition offers a fresh perspective on Ballens body of work.
Ballens photographic style is immediately recognizable, said Christine Mullen Kreamer, deputy director and chief curator at the National Museum of African Art. His fascination with line in his work―which ranges from twisted coat hangers and electrical cords to wall stains―becomes an integral part of complex juxtapositions of people, animals, objects and drawings that Ballen uses to pull us into an open-ended dialogue with his photographs.
With more than 30 million viewings on YouTube, Ballens recent video collaboration with the South African rap-rave group Die Antwoord, for the song I Fink U Freeky, has taken him in new directions. Ballens well-known works include the photographic series Dorps, Small Towns of South Africa (19821986), Platteland, Images from Rural South Africa (19861994), Outland (19952000), Shadow Chamber (20002004) and Boarding House (20042008). In addition, Ballen has devised a special technique for a series of works called Apparitions in which he paints and draws directly on to glass. He then illuminates the glass and photographs it. A significant shift has taken place in these photographs, as the raw, graffiti-like drawings characteristic of much of Ballens work has been replaced by a series of abstract, glyph-like images.
Ballen has been shooting black-and-white film for nearly a half-century. A New York native, he has lived in South Africa for more than 30 yearsduring this time he has worked as a geologist and photographer. The artists photographs of rural South Africans in their homes quickly became distinguished for their interior arrangements and the events that transpired among the people, animals and furnishings within. Early in his career, Ballen met and was inspired by prominent photographers, including Henri Cartier-Bresson, Elliott Erwitt, André Kertész and Paul Strand.