¡De vuelta a la escuela!
“Hybrid” Diocesan Convention Planned for 2021
2021 Wardens’ Conference: Presentations and Recorded Sessions
A Child and a Miracle
A Sunday School Pandemic Journal
ACT: 50 Years and Looking Forward
Are We Teaching Our Children How to Live?
Arts Education Amidst a Pandemic
Back to School!
Breath of Freedom: Rural and Migrant Ministry’s Summer Overnight Leadership Camp
Campus Ministry Across the Diocese
Chrysalis
Confirmands Get Creative
Covid on (and Off) Campus
Developing The Next Generation of Leaders
Diocesan Protocols for Covid 19 Now Mirror Those of the State of New York
Episcopal Charities Receives $1 Million Anonymous Donation
Episcopal Futures Learning Communities Launched at Pentecost
Grace Year: In Preparation for Leadership for the Common Good
Hacer espacio para dejar que los niños nos guíen
Introducing Rev. Kevin W. VanHook, II, the New Executive Director of Episcopal Charities
Jonathan Daniels Pilgrims Reflect
Kelly Latimore: Iconographer of a New Imago Dei
Make Space to Let the Children Lead Us
Mission of Our Youth: Poverty in New York
New Executive Director for Episcopal Charities
New Youth Grantmaking Board at Christ’s Church, Rye
Palm Sunday Hospitality with 10- and 11-Year-Olds
Pennoyer Appointed Head of Grace Church School
PPP Loans: Reminder to Congregations to Apply for Loan Forgiveness if You Qualify
Prayers from Our Hearts
Report from the St. Margaret’s and St. Luke’s Branches of the Girls’ Friendly Society
Seeing Past the Horizon
The Journey
Un niño y un milagro
Video Hit: St. James’ children’s ministries series Did You Know?
Voices Heard: A Diocese Explores Pathways Toward Reparations
We Need All Ages
When I Was a Child: The Beginnings of Faith
Home » Modern-day old master: Jersey City painter depicts African Americans as Bible characters
Print this article

Modern-day old master: Jersey City painter depicts African Americans as Bible characters

Ballon. Deposition
Tyler D. Ballon. The Deposition2018. Photo: the artist.

The term “old master painters” always brings the well-known heavy hitters to mind: Giotto, Leonardo, Dürer, and Mantegna, who are on the long list of European men (and a few women) who, between the 13th and 19th centuries, produced some of the greatest paintings in Western art. They were highly trained, masters of their local artists’ guilds, and often worked independently. (Pupils or workshops sometimes produced paintings under an old master’s name and are also included in the scope of this term.)

On the day of this writer’s Zoom interview with him, casually clad in jeans and a tee-shirt emblazoned with the words “God vs. my enemies,” Tyler Ballon looked nothing like the traditional image of an “old master.” From his canvas-packed studio located in Jersey City’s Mana Contemporary Center, where he holds an Eileen S. Kaminsky Family Foundation (ESKFF) residency, the 24-year-old African-American figurative artist (whose work has been praised by rappers such as Snoop Dogg and Ice Tea, as well as those in the art community) turns out large-scale paintings like those which Renaissance and Baroque era European artists typically produced in their day. But the common themes of old master paintings have also strongly inspired the Jersey City native and graduate of the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, who traces to early childhood his first encounters with these works’ depictions of mythological heroes, and, more importantly for him, biblical characters and saints. Over the last several years, Ballon has used old master techniques from celebrated works to draw attention to the challenges Black Americans face.

Tyler D. Ballon. Mary in Prayer. 2017. Photo: the artist,

Ballon tells of having grown up in a “challenging environment,” in which many of his peers were incarcerated, struggled to support families, or died violently. But he credits his parents (who are both pastors in the Pentecostal Church) and his love of art for setting him on a different path. “Art saved me,” Ballon asserts, and at first it was merely a hobby, which competed with his other love, boxing. But his now-deceased grandmother, upon seeing a drawing he did of her, encouraged him to “keep it up,” because it would bring him and the family success. In 2013 and 2014, he received the Young Arts awards (which are presented by the National Young Arts Foundation, located in Miami, Florida), and since 2014, his work has been included in several group exhibitions in this country and in Sweden.

During his years attending a Roman Catholic grammar school and church, Ballon was exposed to and fell in love with traditional iconography, which told the Bible’s dramatic stories in stained-glass and sculpture. And as a high school student, he became acquainted with the works of Michelangelo and other great painters of the Renaissance and Baroque periods. Says Ballon, “I was always very observant, and I noticed and was impressed by their technical skill, use of color, and profound knowledge of human anatomy, as well as their ability to turn the Scriptures so powerfully into ‘real life’ on the canvas.”

However, Ballon’s deep affection and respect for the work of the old masters gradually came into conflict with his growing and discomfiting awareness of their Eurocentrism. “I felt a separation from the art because all of the figures were White people. I loved the work, but none looked like me. It left me feeling excluded from the conversation.” Representations of what is now often termed the “Black body” in European art have been scant and largely peripheral. Black figures, frequently unidentified, were relegated to the margins, in the background of paintings, or portrayed in servile roles. One exception is Balthazar, recounted in legend as one of the three magi who brought gifts to the Christ Child. As Ballon explains, “We live in direct relationship to our heroes. If our heroes are in the Bible and yet don’t resemble us in images, we can’t see ourselves as trying to be like them or trying to do what they’ve done.”

It is this pictorial vacuum that Tyler Ballon has so determinedly filled with his work. Using the tools of the old masters-grand canvases and oil paint-and fluently speaking their iconographic language, Ballon has moved Black bodies from the shadowy margins of the canvas to the forefront, portraying (and also honoring) them as biblical characters. He uses his paintings to document the struggle and pain still embedded in the contemporary Black experience, while interpreting these circumstances within the Christian narratives of faith and redemption.

Ballon’s meticulously detailed paintings often evoke the work of American illustrator Norman Rockwell, as well as that of Kehinde Wiley, the African-American artist whose paintings also reference European masterpieces, and whose portrait of former President Barack Obama drew accolades. Ballon is not bothered by the mix-up with Wiley, whom he met when he was 18 years old and whom he idolizes for the older artist’s technique and his broad knowledge of art history.

Tyler D. Ballon. Take Up Your Cross. 2020. Photo: the artist.

While Ballon draws inspiration from a variety of old master painters, the use of color and light, strong composition, and powerful storytelling seen in works by the renowned Roman Renaissance and Baroque painter Caravaggio (1571-1610), are reflected most prominently in his work.

Ballon brings these elements together to emphasize the pathos and theatricality of The Deposition (2018), one of his most pointedly Caravaggio-inspired works. Here, the mourners, one of whom locks eyes with us, are captured in the same fan-shaped arrangement as those in the Italian master’s 1603 The Entombment. But in Ballon’s hands, they have become residents of an African-American neighborhood lamenting over the murdered body of a loved one. As a kind of homage to Caravaggio, who often included himself in his paintings, Ballon has cast himself as the corpse in this work.

With an economy of gesture and expression, the artist gives his attention to hands in Called (2019), where another young man (again, the artist), wearing a baseball cap, sits on a damaged set of steps. He is interrupted from counting the money he holds in each hand by a white-jacketed but faceless figure who holds a Bible in his right hand while pointing to the young man with his left. Looking up, the young man points to himself, as if to ask, “Who, me?” In this work inspired by Caravaggio’s The Calling of Saint Matthew (1599-1600), Ballon represents subtly yet powerfully the decisive moment when the soul is summoned.

Take Up Your Cross (2020) offers an ambiguous portrayal of its subject. Drenched in dramatic, Caravaggesque light, he looks penetratingly at the viewer, appearing to be just another elementary school kid clutching an unusual object he has found. But in truth, he is the young Jesus embracing the instrument of his death.

Mary in Prayer (2018), based this time on Francisco de Zurbarán’s The Young Virgin (1632-33), is a nearly full-length figure work and one of Ballon’s most explicitly devotional images. The subject, draped in red, wearing silver jewelry accented with symbols of faith and set in an almost completely red space, is caught in a moment of quiet yet focused prayer. The open book (suggesting the Scriptures) on her lap and her hands positioned to receive the Holy Spirit, place “Mary” solidly in Western iconography, yet Ballon uses her to address current conversations about whose body can embody holiness.

Tyler D. Ballon. Called. 2019. Photo: the artist.

Although not a member of a faith community, like the message on his tee-shirt, Ballon is forthright about his beliefs and self-identifies as a devout Christian who dedicates all of his work to God’s glory. “God is the source of my gifts and my greatest agent, who brings opportunities to me.” He feels closest to Joseph, on whom God bestowed the gift to interpret dreams, whereas Ballon feels that he has received the gift to interpret the Scriptures through his paintings. His goal is to become one of the greatest figurative painters in the art world, and to be a mentor to other young artists. But, again, he leaves that in God’s hands.

Tyler Ballon is part of a small but growing group of artists who have returned to representing the human form. His models are friends, family, and members of his immediate community, and in his view, the figure expresses most effectively all that can be expressed in life. As was true for these painters from Europe’s past, composition, vivid color, light, and gesture are his currency. Whereas some may accuse the artist of a lack of originality, his references to and evocations of their works are in keeping with past practices of artists’ borrowing from one another’s masterpieces. After all, imitation is the highest form of praise.

More importantly, Tyler Ballon is contributing meaningfully to the growing interest in and discussions about the lives of African Americans and other people of color by bringing together their underrepresented bodies and a European art form to tell the Bible’s compelling stories. His work unapologetically affirms that these bodies can portray sacred characters, be the bearers of eternal truths, and can reflect the imago Dei.