Roger Ballen
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Roger Ballen | |
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Born | 1950 New York City, New York, United States |
Residence | Johannesburg, South Africa |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | |
Occupation | Photographer |
Notable work |
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Spouse(s) | Lynda Ballen |
Children |
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Website | www.rogerballen.com |
Roger Ballen (born in New York City, New York, United States, 1950) is an American photographer living in Johannesburg, South Africa, and working in its surrounds since the 1970s. His body of work, developed over a period of four decades, began in the documentary field but his approach has widened to allow for a fictionalised visual dialogue between individuals, their architectural space, found objects and domesticated animals. His approach has been hailed as among the most unusual and exciting developments in contemporary photography.[1][2]
روجر بالين (ولد في مدينة نيويورك، نيويورك، الولايات المتحدة، 1950) هو مصور أمريكي يعيش في جوهانسبرغ، جنوب أفريقيا، ويعمل في محيطه منذ 1970s. بدأ جسد عمله، الذي تطور على مدى أربعة عقود، في المجال الوثائقي ولكن اتسعت نهجه للسماح بالحوار البصري الخيالي بين الأفراد، والفضاء المعماري، وجدت الأشياء والحيوانات الأليفة. وقد أشاد نهجه بأنه من بين التطورات الأكثر غرابة ومثيرة في التصوير الفوتوغرافي المعاصر. [1] [2]
في حين أن عمل بالين غالبا ما يوصف بأنه “مظلم”، يصف تصويره بأنه نفساني أساسي، ويتحدث عن الصور التي تشير إلى “الجانب الظل” للبشرية. يقول: “الظل أفضل من الظلام، لأن الظلام لكثير من الناس يفسد الشر، وأنا دائما أقول أنه العكس تماما […] لا ينبغي أن ينظر إلى الصور على أنها مظلمة، وأنا لست تماما واضح ما هو ‘الظلام’، على أي حال. “[3]
وقد كتب النقاد حول تحول بالين من تصوير كل يوم إلى إنشاء مناشيد المائدة، مشيرا إلى أن الترتيب الدرامي قد تحدى اتفاقيات التصوير الوثائقي.
في مؤلفاته للطبعة الثانية من أوتلاند، أشار مؤرخ الفن والقائم بيتر ويرماير إلى أن انتقال بالين من الهدف والتمثيل إلى التعاون مع رعاياه يعني أنه تخلى عن الدور الحاسم كمؤرخ للأحداث لصالح السماح بأرقامه لتصبح “أطرافا في الدراما الوجودية”. [4] في الأعمال السابقة كان هؤلاء الأفراد الذين يعانون من حل أمر واحد في جنوب أفريقيا بدلا من أمر آخر؛ في عملية انسحبوا إلى الأراضي المخفية التي استكشفها بالين. [5]
ويلاحظ ويرماير أن لعبة إظهار ورؤية، التي تنطوي على نموذج ومصور، غير ذات أهمية، في حين يكتب ديدي بوزيني أن العلاقة بين بالين ورعاياه هو التخريبية من الكسل من نظرتنا اليومية. [6]
وفقا لويرماير، هو الطابع النموذجي للصور التي “يمس اللاوعي لدينا”، ولكن أيضا من خلال اتفاقيات التصوير بالأبيض والأسود، الفن الخارجي والمسرح من العبث أن نفهم الداخلية من المناظر الطبيعية بالين. ومع ذلك فقد تم توسيع نطاق ممارسته لتشمل المنشآت الفيديوية والمفاهيمية، مما يسمح باستخدام الوسط الضوئي لدفع الكاميرا إلى أبعد من دورها التقليدي المتمثل في “تسجيل أو التقاط الحقيقة” مع الاحتفاظ باستخدامها كمحفز لفحص كل ذلك هو الإنسان، لإعادة صياغة الناقد روبرت جس يونغ. [7]
While Ballen’s work is often described as “dark”, he describes his photography as essentially psychological, and speaks of the images referring to humanity’s “shadow side”. He say: “Shadow is better than dark, because dark for a lot of people connotates evil, and I always say it’s just the opposite. […] The pictures shouldn’t be seen as dark, and I’m not quite clear what is ‘dark’, anyway.”[3]
Critics have written about Ballen’s shift from depictions of the everyday to the creation of tableaux vivants noting that the dramatic arrangement has defied conventions of documentary photography.
In his preface to the second edition of Outland, art historian and curator Peter Weiermair has noted that Ballen’s move from the objective and representational to collaboration with his subjects has meant that he has forsaken the critical role as chronicler of events in favour of allowing his figures to become “protagonists in an existential drama”.[4] In earlier works these were individuals experiencing the dissolution of one order in South Africa in place of another; in the process they retreated to hidden territories explored by Ballen.[5]
Weiermair notes that the game of showing and seeing, involving model and photographer, is rendered irrelevant, while Didi Bozzini writes that the relation between Ballen and his subjects is disruptive of the laziness of our everyday gaze.[6]
According to Weiermair, it is the archetypal character of the images that “touches our subconscious”, yet it is also through the conventions of black and white photography, outsider artand theatre of the absurd that we comprehend the interiority of Ballen’s landscapes. His practice has however been extended to include video and conceptual installations, allowing the photographic medium to be used to push the camera even further from its traditional role of “recording or capturing the real” while retaining its use as provocateur for an examination of all that is human, to paraphrase critic Robert J. C. Young.[7]
Early life
Ballen was raised in Westchester County outside New York City. His father was an attorney, his mother Adrienne was a member of the famous photo agency Magnum from 1963 to 1967 prior to opening the Photography House Gallery with Inge Bondi in New York City in 1968. Ulrich Pohlmann notes that he became acquainted with the photographs of Andre Kertezs, Edward Streichen, Paul Strand, Elliot Erwitt, Bruce Davidson and Henri Cartier-Bressoneither from published photographs in albums or through meeting them. He got his first camera when he was 13, later studied psychology at the University of California, Berkeley with its countercultures and, as Pohlmann records, he produced his first series of portraits of people who had taken part in student demonstrations against the Vietnam War.
After his mother’s premature death in 1973, disillusionment sent him away to travel across Europe, Asia and Africa. He began shooting scenes of street life and published Boyhood in 1979 which Pohlmann cites as “impressive photos of boys that Ballen had taken while seeking to recreate his own childhood”.
Returning to the US Ballen studied for a PhD at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colorado, and travelled to Johannesburg in 1982 where he found work as a geologist and mining entrepreneur.
Ballen regards the years from 1974 to 1978 as a “psychological period” of turning inward culminating in the publication of Boyhood before a “dead period” prior to the publication of a landmark work that would alter his course.
Works
Ballen first came to prominence as a photographer with the publication of Dorps: Small Towns of South Africa (Cape Town: Clifton Publications, 1986). Young calls the view of the Afrikaner underclass dispassionate “without comment or obvious involvement” – possibly akin to Ballen’s portrayal of the architecture that surrounded them. As a practising geologist, on field trips Ballen had encountered his subjects living “under the imagined benefits of the policies of the regime”. The landscape photographs in Dorps would mark the end of Ballen’s foray into outdoor photography. But the book also marks the beginning of Ballen’s use of the middle format camera and flash, as well as the deliberate choice of a square negative and black and white film that Ulrich Pohlmann calls his “trademark” allowing for “tight, well-balanced images”.
The year 1994 saw the publication of Platteland: Images from Rural South Africa (Johannesburg: William Waterman Publications, 1994 and republished as Platteland Revisited: Images from Rural South Africa, Pretoria: Protea Publishing, 2013) called by Susan Sontag “the most impressive sequence of portraits I’ve seen in years”.[8]
Projects that followed have included Outland (London: Phaidon, 2000; reprinted 2009; revised 2015) with the expanded edition containing 30 previously unpublished pictures, introduced by Peter Weiermair former Director of the Rupertinum in Salzburg, Austria and the Galleria d’Arte Moderna in Bologna, Italy and with a new essay by Elizabeth Sussman, Sondra Gilman Curator of Photography at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.
Shadow Chamber (London: Phaidon, 2004) further explored the underbelly or the “shadow chamber” of existence. In his oeuvre the book took major leaps into Ballen’s metaphoric dimension with multiple conscious and subconscious meanings: ambiguous images of people, animals and objects posed in mysterious, cell-like rooms occupying a grey area between fact and fiction, blurring the boundaries between documentary photography and art forms such as painting, theatre and sculpture.
As Robert A Sobieszek wrote in his introduction to Shadow Chamber: “To discern fact from fiction in this work may be simply impossible; to tell acting from real life may also be; to bother with such discernment may not be only futile but missing the point”.[9]
Boarding House (London: Phaidon, 2008) with over 70 black and white images contained tableaux with a greater emphasis on drawn and sculptural elements, and a sense of collaboration between the artist and his subjects. With an introductory essay by photography curator David Travis – former chair and chief Curator in the Photography Department at the Art Institute of Chicago – describing a space of transient residence, of comings and goings, of people sheltered in a place used for their immediate survival.
Basic and fundamental, the structure is furnished with objects necessary for an elementary existence, decorated with evocative drawings, and littered throughout with animals. Remnants function there as physical symbols of events that have occurred in the space; broken pieces of a functional reality exist as the leftovers of scenarios that have been played out there. The altered sense of place of the temporary abode created a sense of alienation, a jumping off point for the imagination to run wild.
Asylum of the Birds (London: Thames & Hudson, 2013) was a monograph of iconic photographs all taken entirely within the confines of a house in a Johannesburg suburb, the location of which has remained a tightly guarded secret. The cast was made up of inhabitants of the house, both people and animals, and most notably the ever-present birds, all performing within a sculptural and decorated theatrical interior created and orchestrated by Ballen.
In 2006 the co-leader of the South African rap group Die Antwoord, Yolandi, contacted Ballen proposing a collaboration. In 2008, together with Ballen, Die Antwoord began to appear in a series of photographs that incorporated his later aesthetic and which ultimately would take his imagery to a new audience of millions.
In 2011, Ballen directed the music video for the song “I Fink U Freeky” which has garnered over 76 million views on YouTube.[10]
Roger Ballen – Die Antwoord: I Fink U Freeky (Munich: Prestel, 2013) was a book collaboration with Die Antwoord incorporating a conversation with the group’s leaders, Yolandi and Ninja, as well as an essay by South African journalist and critic Ivor Powell. In it Powell writes that the works are “more than just a visual record of oddities, eccentricities and characteristic features. The photograph embodies a series of significant choices on the part of the photographer … What Ballen finds a way of articulating and moving inside is the secret life of the soiled self-projected into photographic imagery”.
In 2015, Ballen extended his conceptual installation artwork when he was invited by Finland’s Serlachius Museum in Mantta to transform a real, disused house found in a Finish forest into a complete sculptural entity to be installed in the largest exhibition space of the museum’s New Pavilion.
The work coincided with a new publication, The House Project (London: Oodee, 2015) with long-time collaborator, writer Didi Bozzini that is structured so as to move away from a historical exposition of Ballen’s work in favour of a psychological one, evoking possible literary and philosophical references in his work.
The book is structured as a house with chapters evoking architectural space: The Cellar, The Ground Floor, The First Floor, The Attic. Literary references include James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Mark Twain, Franz Kafka and Edgar Allan Poe while philosophical references include Gaston Bachelard and Carl Gustav Jung.
The House Project is also the title and conceptual starting point for Ballen’s most recent exhibition of the same name running in his home town, Johannesburg at Gallery MOMO until March 2016.
The selection of works include his most recent method of constructing archival pigment prints with light, heat, staining and smearing glass. About this process Young questions, “Are these images, in fact, still ‘photographs’ in the conventional sense at all? … Instead of presenting images of the real, his photographs have come to delineate and describe the textured traces of a new medium of drawing that extends the forms of reality that photography can capture”.[11]
Ballen’s frequent collaborator and the recipient of multiple dedications in his books is the photographer and designer Marguerite Rossouw.
Publications
Publications by Ballen
- Boyhood. New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1979. ISBN0877540918.
- Dorps: Small Towns of South Africa. Cape Town: Hirt and Carter, 1986. Reprinted by Protea Boekhuis, 2011.
- Platteland. Rivonia (ZA): William Waterman, and London: Quartet, 1994; New York: St. Martin’s, 1996.
- Cette Afrique là. Photo Poche series. Paris: Nathan, 1997.
- Outland. London: Phaidon, 2001.
- Expanded edition. Phaidon, 2015.
- Fact or Fiction. Paris: Kamel Mennour, 2003, ISBN291417109-9.
- Shadow Chamber. London: Phaidon, 2005.
- Boarding House. London: Phaidon, 2009.
- Animal Abstraction. Exhibition catalogue Galerie Alex Daniels, Amsterdam: Reflex, 2011
- Roger Ballen. Photo Poche series. Paris: Nathan, 2012.
- I Fink U Freeky. Random House Prestel, 2013.
- Asylum of the Birds. London: Thames & Hudson, 2014. ISBN9780500544297. With an introduction by Didi Bozzini.
- The House Project. Oodee, 2015. ISBN9780957038974. Edition of 1000 copies.
Publication paired with another
- No Joke. London: Morel, 2016. With Asger Carlsen. ISBN978-1-907071-56-0. Edition of 1000 copies.
Contributions to publications
- Contatti. Provini d’Autore = Choosing the best photo by using the contact sheet. Vol. I. Edited by Giammaria De Gasperis. Rome: Postcart, 2012. ISBN978-88-86795-87-6.
Solo exhibitions (selected)
Roger Ballen has taken part to numerous group and solo exhibitions. Some of the latter are listed below:[12]
2017
- Hamiltons Gallery – London, United Kingdom
- Daum Museum of Contemporary Art, Sedalia, United States
- La ERRE Cultural Soace, Guatemala
- Origins Centre Association, Johannesburg, South Africa
- Guandong Museum, China
- Akershus Kunstsenter, Lillestrom, Norway
- Te Uru Waitakere Contemporary Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand
- Tauranga Art Gallery, Tauranga, New Zealand
- Biennial Fotografica Bogota, Columbia
- John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota Florida, United States
- Stadtmuseum + Kunstsammlung Jena, Jena, Germany
2016
- Anzenberger Gallery, Handmade Show, Austria
- Aura Gallery, China
- Barbado Gallery, Lisboa, Portugal
- Carpentier Gallery, Berlin, Germany
- Central Academy of Fine Art Museum, Beijing
- Centro Fotografico Manuel Alvarez Bravo, Mexico
- City Gallery Palffy Palais, Bratislava, Slovakia
- Etherton Gallery, Tucson, United States
- Fototeca, Monterrey, Mexico
- Foto Museo de Cuatro Caminos, Mexico City
- Galleria Massimo Minini, Brescia, Italy
- Gallery Momo, Cape Town
- Gallery Momo, Johannesburg
- Hamilton Gallery, London, UK
- Hydra and Fotografia, Mexico
- Izzy Gallery, Toronto, Canada
- James Fuentes, New York City, United States
- João Barbado – Lisboa, Portugal
- Museo Arocena, Torreón, Mexico
- Museum Dr Guislain Gent
- Museum of Contemporary Art, Istanbul Turkey
- Natalie and James Thompson Art Gallery, San Jose
- State University, San Jose, United States
- Photokina, Cologne, Germany
- SIPF Gillman Barracks, Singapore
- SNAP! Gallery, Orlando, Florida, United States
- Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona, United States
- Sunaparanta, Goa Centre for the Arts, India
- Sydney College of the Arts, University of Sydney, Australia
- TEA Tenerife Espacio de las Artes, Canary Islands
- Von der Heydt-Kunsthalle, Wuppertal-Barmen
- Wei-Ling Contemporary, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
- Zemack Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel
- Bogotá Photo Festival, Bogotá, Colombia
2015
- CAFAM, Beijing, China
- Chazen Museum of Art, Wisconsin, United States
- David Krut Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
- Frigoriferi Milanesi, Milan, Italy
- Fried Gallery, Pretoria, South Africa
- Galerie Karsten Greve, Köln, Germany
- Galerie Rudolphe Janssen, Masks, Brussels, Belgium
- Galerie Senda, Barcelona, Spain
- Kafka House, Prague, Czech Republic
- Kyotographie, Kyoto, Japan
- La Fabrica, Madrid, Spain
- Montserrat, Barcelona, Spain
- Museum of Image, Braga, Portugal
- Photoink, New Delhi, India
- Pori Art Museum, Pori , Finland
- Serlachius Museum, Mänttä, Finland Museo de Arte Contemporáneo, Santiago, Chile
- Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo, Brazil
2014
- Moscow Media Centre, Moscow, Russia
- Museu Oscar Niemeyter, Brazil
- Museum of Contemporary Art, Rome, Italy
- Christophe Guye Galerie, Zurich, Switzerland [13]
- Festival de la Luz, Buenos Aires, Chile
- Fotografiska, Stockholm, Sweden
- Kunst- und Kulturzentrum Monschau, Aachen, Germany
- Mueum Dr. Guislain, Gent, Belgium
- Musee Nicephore Niepce, Chalon-sur Saone, France
- Oliewenhuis Art Museum, Bloemfontein, South Africa
2013
- Belfast Photo Festival, Belfast, Northern Ireland
- Maison De L’Image Documentaire, The CèTávoiR Association, Paris, France
- Museum of Old and New, Hobart, Australia
- Nikolaj Copenhagen Contemporary Art Center, Denmark
- Photoink, New Delhi, India
- Pingao International Photography Festival, China
- Palm Springs Art Museum, California, USA
- Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, Washington DC, United States
- Westlicht, Schauplatz fur Fotografie, Vienna, Austria
2012
- Erdmann Contemporary & the Photographers Gallery za, Cape Town, South Africa
- Guate Festival, Guatemala de la Asunción, Guatemala
- Kleinschmidt Fine Photographs, Wiesbaden, Germany
- Kunstalle, Vienna, Austria
- Manchester Art Museum, Great Britain
- Marta Herford Museum, Herford, Germany
- Musee de l Elysee, Lausanne Switzerland
- Museu de Arte Moderna, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- Northwest University Museum, Potchestroom, South Africa
- Novosibirsk Art Museum, Russia
- Rosphoto, St. Petersburg, Russia
- Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel
2011
- Angkor Photo Festival, Cambodia
- Fondazione Terre Medicee, Seravezza, Italy
- Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal, Canada
- Museum Het Domein, Sittard, Netherlands
- Omsk Museum, Russia
- Sammlung Prinzhorn, Outland and Shadow Chamber, Heidelberg, Germany
2010
- Comune di Arco/Galleria Civica, Italy
- Centro de Arte la Regenta, Las Palmas, Spain
- Festival of Photography of Savignano, Italy
- George Eastman House, Rochester, United States
- Sammlungsleiter Fotomuseum, Munich, Germany
- Stenersen Museum, Oslo, Norway
- Sydney Biennale, Australia
- University of the O.F.S., South Africa
- Ubuntu, Salzburg Austria
- Ubuntu, Berlin, Germany
- George Eastman House, Rochester, United States
- Sammlungsleiter Fotomuseum, Munich, Germany
- Stenersen Museum, Oslo, Norway
- Sydney Biennale, Australia
- University of the O.F.S., South Africa
2008
- AEREA / Christian Larsen, Stockholm, Sweden
- Hertzelia Artists Host Centre, Tel Aviv, Israel
- Omaggio a Federico Vender at Palazzo dei Panni of Arco Trento Su Palatu, Sardinia, Italy
2007
- Deichtorhallen, Hamburg, Germany
2006
- Atlanta College of Arts, United States
- Berlin Biennial, Berlin, Germany
- Biblioteque Nationale, Paris, France
- Everard Read, Johannesburg, South Africa
- Fotografisk Center, Copenhagen, Denmark
- Guido Costa Projects, Torino, Italy
- Museum voor Fotografie, Antwerp, Belgium
- National Arts Festival, South Africa
- Oliewenhuis Art Museum, Bloem, South Africa
- Photographer’s Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
- Sasol Museum, Stellenbosch, South Africa
2005
- Frans Hals Museum, Haarlem, United States
2004
- Berkeley Art Museum, California, United States
- Le Chateau d’ eau a Toulouse, France
- State Museum of Russia, St. Petersburg, Russia
2002
- Centro Cultural de Maia, O’Porto, Portugal
- Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, United States
- Musee Nicephore Niepce, Chalon-sur-Saône, France
- Museo Nazionalle Italy, Brescia, Italy
- Museet for Fotokunst, Odense, Danmark
- Sala Rekalde, Bilbao, Spain
2001
- Association for Visual Arts, Cape Town, South Africa
- Encontros da imagem, Braga, Portugal
- Fotoforum, Frankfurt, Germany
- Hasselblad Center, Gothenburg, Sweden
- International Photo Festival, Herten, Herten
- Krefelder Kunstmuseen, Krefeld, Germany
- Mateo Inurria, Cordoba, Spain
- PhotoEspana, Madrid, Spain
- Printemps de Septembre a Toulouse, France
- Rupertinum, Salzburg. Austria
- Wurttembergischer Kunstverein, Stuttgart, Germane
2000
- Museum of Photography, Athens, Greece
- Noordelicht, Amsterdam, Netherlans
- Royal Theatre of Namur, Belgium
- Sani Festival, Greece
- Thessaloniki, Month of Photography, Greece
1999
- Month of Photography, Bratislava, Slovakia
- Month of Photography, Cape Town, South Africa
1998
- Kunsthaus, Zurich, Switzerland
- Kunstal Museum, Rotterdam, Netherlands
1996
- Eindhoven Photographic Festival, Netherlands
- Tarranto Gallery, New York City, United States
1995
- Arles Photographic Festival, Arles, France
- Royal Festival Hall/Hayward, London, Great Britain
1994
- Afrikaner Museum, Johannesburg, South Africa
- Michaelis Collection, Cape Town, South Africa
1986
- Pretoria Art Museum, Pretoria, South Africa
1982
- Market Theatre, Johannesburg, South Africa
1981
- Centre for Photography, Denver, United States
Awards
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- Sani Festival, Best Solo Exhibition, Greece, 2000
- Special mention: UNICEF Photo of the Year 2001
- Photo-eye, Best Documentary Title, Best Photography Books of 2001
- PhotoEspana, Best Photographic Book of the Year, Spain – 2001
- Top 10 Exhibition, Vince Aletti, Artforum – 2002
- Photographer of the Year,Rencontres d’ Arles – 2002
- Citigroup Prize, finalist, UK – 2002
- Top 10 Exhibition, Matthew Higgs, Artforum-2004
- “Selma Blair Witch Project” – New York Times Magazine, October 31, 2005
- Art Directors Club Award Photography – 2006
- I Fink U Freeky. Award for best music video at the 20th Short Vila do Conde International Film Festival, Portugal, 2012
- Best Music Video, I Fink U Freeky, Plus Camerimage International Film Festival of the Art of Cinematography in Bydgoszcz, Poland
- Süddeutsche Zeitung Magazin, Edition 46, Artist of the Year, published on 14 November 2014
Collections
Ballen’s work is held in the following permanent collections:
- Galería la Aurora, Murcia, Spain[14]
- Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands[15]
References
- Jump up^ Ulrich Pohlmann, Roger Ballen: Photographs 1969-2009, Bielefeld: Kerber PhotoArt, 2010
- Jump up^ Roger Ballen,“About Roger”, rogerballen.com, October 6, 2014. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
- Jump up^ Matthews, Katherine Oktober (May 14, 2015). “The Shadow Side: An Interview with Roger Ballen”. GUP Magazine.
- Jump up^ Peter Weiermair,“Portraits as Still Lifes: the Photographs of Roger Ballen”, absolutearts.com, June 19, 2001. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
- Jump up^ Roger Ballen, Outland, London: Phaidon, 2000
- Jump up^ Roger Ballen, Roger Ballen’s Theatre of the Absurd, Oslo: Pug, 2015
- Jump up^ Ed Lars Schwarder, Roger Ballen: Retrospective, Copenhagen: Nikolaj Kunsthal, 2013
- Jump up^ Susan Sontag,“Editorial Review”, Amazon.com, August 15, 2015. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
- Jump up^ Robert A Sobieszek,“Shadow Chamber”, rogerballen.com, October 14, 2014. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
- Jump up^ Roger Ballen & Die Antwoord,“I Fink U Freeky”, YouTube, January 31, 2012. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
- Jump up^ Craig Allen Subler, Christine Mullen Kreamer, Washington DC/London: NMAfA/Smithsonian Institution, Delmonico Books, Prestel, 2013
- Jump up^ Roger Ballen Official Website
- Jump up^ Christophe Guye Galerie, Asylum of the Birds, 2014
- Jump up^ Galería la Aurora,“Artista: Roger Ballen”, Galería la Aurora. Retrieved 2016-01-26.
- Jump up^ Stedelijk Museum,“Collection: Roger Ballen”, Stedelijk Museum. Retrieved 2016-01-26.