“For me, photography is a way to mine ideas that are things.”
Edward Burtynsky
Edward Burtynsky
For most of its
history, photography has identified with Henri Cartier-Bresson’s “Decisive Moment” about which the French
photographer said “photography is the simultaneous recognition, in a fraction
of a second, of the significance of an event as well as of a precise
organization of forms which give that event its proper expression.”
It is a definition that Canadian photographer Edward Burtynsky rejects in favor of
“The Contemplated Moment.” Burtynsky presents a more nuanced view of the
world than that of the snapshot no matter how significant. As he says in Exploring the Residual Landscape “These images are meant as metaphors to the dilemma of
our modern existence; they search for a dialogue between attraction and
repulsion, seduction and fear. We are drawn by desire - a chance at good
living, yet we are consciously or unconsciously aware that the world is
suffering for our success.”
A point Burtynsky underscores when talking
about his Water Project. As he told Wired Magazine’s
Doug Birend “Rather than kind of chasing the bad actors and celebrating the
saints, I just thought why not just put water as the central issue and make it
the subject. In the whole environmental debate there’s been a lot of brick
throwing and condemnation from one group to another, and I’m not sure how much
it has helped.”
It is a similar breadth
of contemplation that led to Burtynsky’s arguable best known, four part, Oil Project;
Extraction and Refinement, Transportation and Motor Culture, Detroit and The
End of Oil. As he wrote in the project’s statement “The car
that I drove cross-country began to represent not only freedom, but also
something much more conflicted. I began to think about oil itself: as both the
source of energy that makes everything possible, and as a source of dread, for
its ongoing endangerment of our habitat.”
Burtynsky was 11 when along with his sister and father, he learned
the intricacies of photography. After a stint at Ryerson University where he
gained a BA in photography Burtynsky realized that the world of his hero, Ansell Adams was long gone
and as he has said “I recognized that this was not the landscape of my time
anymore, that the landscapes of my time were the ones where we change what was
nature in terms of the things we use. That, to me, was a quantum shift. It was
all of a sudden not looking at landscape.”
Often using a high point of view, Burtynsky makes strangely
beautiful photographs of the tragically scarred landscape we leave behind. As reported
in an Artsy
editorial about his Ted
wish, Burtynsky has said of his images “It gets
people to look at these things, it gets people to enter.” And in line with his Ted
wish of sustainability, “We have to learn to think more long-term about the
consequences of what we are doing, while we are doing it.”
Exhibitions of
Burtynsky’s photographs are currently on show at Innsbruck’s FO.KU.S Gallery
until the 9th of May, Chaumont-sur-Loire’s Domaine
Régional until the 1st of November, Massachusetts Fruitlands
Museum until the 21st of June and Los Angeles Von Lintel Gallery until the
20th of June.
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