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Edward Burtynsky: Charles Cowles Gallery. (New York).


Gone are the days of big canvases glutting exhibition spaces, now that photography has largely replaced painting as the medium of choice among contemporary artists. The "new painting" often has little to do with painting itself, of course, except perhaps in terms of scale; indeed, the ubiquity of the photograph almost makes one yearn for fleshy oils on canvas. Edward Burtynsky's photographs, however, seem geared to satisfy that yearning. In this small survey of work from the past decade, Burtynsky presented a mini-history of postwar art, complete with references to Abstract Expressionism abstract expressionism, movement of abstract painting that emerged in New York City during the mid-1940s and attained singular prominence in American art in the following decade; also called action painting and the New York school. It was the first important school in American painting to declare its independence from European styles and to influence the development of art abroad. Arshile Gorky first gave impetus to the movement. and post-painterly abstraction as well as to Environments and Minimalism. At the same time, his emphasis on monumentality recalls traditional history painting history painting, the painting of scenes from classical and Christian history and mythology. It was taught in the academies of art, from the Renaissance to the 19th cent., as the highest form of art in an hierarchical grouping that ranked still-life painting lowest on the list., complete with miniature human figures to indicate scale.

Burtynsky's "Shipbreaking" series, 2000-2001, is a case in point. Though he doesn't stage his scenes in the overtly artificial manner of fellow Canadian Jeff Wall, these are meticulously choreographed images nonetheless. Burtynsky sets up a shot like a latter-day Claude Lorrain Claude Lorrain (klōd lôrăN`), whose original name was Claude Gelée or Gellée (zhəlā`) blocking out his landscape with trees and crumbling temples. In Shipbreaking #9a [CHARACTER NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] b, Chittagong Chittagong Hill Tracts District, c.5,500 sq mi (14,200 sq km), occupies a narrow inland strip of parallel ranges along the Indian and Myanmarese frontiers. The indigenous inhabitants are members of non-Muslim tribes who are not assimilated with the dominant Bengalis of the lowlands. Valuable timber, bamboo, and cane forests, which cover the upper reaches of the hills, support a paper industry., Bangladesh, 2000, a two-part work, the rusting, deformed hulks of disassembled ships lead the eye into the background, where the scattered components of an industrial graveyard are visible. In the middle distance in both images is a line of workers staring out at the viewer. The spaciousness of such locales stands in contrast to the tighter, more abstract views inside the bodies of the behemoths. Shipbreaking #48, Chittagong, Bangladesh, 2001, focuses on a wall covered in painterly drips of, deep red rust, the recognizable elements of the ship's interior anatomy subsumed in the overall abstraction.

In an earlier series shot in granite quarries in the United States and Canada, Burtynsky adopted the looming frontality of the Becher 1 Son of Benjamin. In First Chronicles "his first-born" should perhaps be read "Becher"; cf. Bocheru. See Bichri.

2 Son of Ephraim. His descendants are called Bachrites. He also appears as Bered.
 school. Yet he invests works like Rock of Ages #26, Abandoned Rock Section, E.L. Smith Quarry, Barre, VT, 1991, with a romanticism that is alien to the Bechers' typological approach. Burtynsky's large-format view camera captures every last nook and cranny of the granite cliffs, allowing the eye to lose itself in the wealth of surface detail. This clarity leads to a kind of postindustrial confrontation with a sublime nature heavily deformed by human activity. Burtynsky's photos of piled cast-off tires in California give a mild sense of vertigo as the heaped objects appear to teeter high above the viewer. One might think of Allan Kaprow's 1961 Environment Yard, a gallery filled with tires for visitors to climb, but in these hyperrealistic photographs it is difficult to imagine the ascent into the vast stretches of rubber. Again, the sheer consistency of the image's ultrasharp foc us denies the perception of spatial recession.

Burtynsky's photographs are expertly produced and visually striking. But they run the risk of becoming mere pretty pictures pretty pictures - (scientific computation) The next step up from numbers. Interesting graphical output from a program that may not have any sensible relationship to the system the program is intended to model, but good for showing to management.. This tendency could be seen most clearly in the "Container Ports" series, 2001, shots of stacked shipping units in Vancouver storage yards that indulge too obviously in the uncritical contemporary fascination with the symbols of globalism. Indeed, the project as a whole can be understood as an investigation of the extreme spatial limits of international capitalism, its marginal activities exposed. Yet Burtynsky's own work can be found at the more familiar end of capital's spectrum: the luxury object that is unlikely to suffer the fate of worn-out ships and used tires.
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Author:Williams, Gregory
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2002
Words:560
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