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Edward Burtynsky: Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts, Stanford University.


Uncomfortable ironies abound in Canadian artist Edward Burtynsky's large color photographs of ravaged rav·age  
v. rav·aged, rav·ag·ing, rav·ages

v.tr.
1. To bring heavy destruction on; devastate: A tornado ravaged the town.

2.
 natural terrain. Burtynsky's subjects have consistently been landscapes in which the process of industrialization industrialization

Process of converting to a socioeconomic order in which industry is dominant. The changes that took place in Britain during the Industrial Revolution of the late 18th and 19th century led the way for the early industrializing nations of western Europe and
 has resulted in spectacles that dwarf the likes of Michael Heizer's sprawling City, 1970-99. Burtynsky's work is undeniably gorgeous yet maintains connections to the documentary. It is also invested with a sense of adventure and achievement: The photography of dangerous places tends to necessitate the negotiation of corporate bureaucracy as well as some tricky outdoor navigation. And although his images can read as the creations of a political environmentalist environmentalist

a person with an interest and knowledge about the interaction of humans and animals with the environment.
 akin to Robert Adams, Burtynsky nonetheless maintains an interest in art-historical sources, including Earthworks earthworks: see land art. , early landscape photography, luminist painting, and even the intensely colored photographs of unpeopled forests that grace the publications of the environmentalist Sierra Club. Burtynsky captures a kind of wonder at the discovery of places that most people never see, but though the images pack an aesthetic punch, they also have powerful political implications.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

One of the surprises of "Manufactured Landscapes: The Photographs of Edward Burtynsky" was its chronological breadth--the artist has been working on this project for decades. Organized by the National Gallery of Canada National Gallery of Canada

National art museum founded in Ottawa in 1880. Its holdings include extensive collections of Canadian art as well as important European works. Its nucleus was formed with the donation of diploma works by members of the Royal Canadian Academy.
 and shown at Stanford University's Iris and B. Gerald Cantor B. Gerald Cantor ( January 17 1916– July 17 1996 ) was the founder and chairman of securities firm Cantor Fitzgerald and an important philanthropist supporting the visual arts institutions in the United States.  Center for Visual Arts in condensed form, the show contained images made between 1984 and 2002. These consistently striking works are characterized by a tone of shock and awe Shock and awe, technically known as rapid dominance, is a military doctrine based on the use of overwhelming decisive force, dominant battlefield awareness, dominant maneuvers, and spectacular displays of power to paralyze an adversary's perception of the battlefield and  that's tempered by hard-edged beauty. They show that capitalism's impact on the planet over the past two decades has been consistently detrimental--a theme with which the artist has persisted in more recent images of China, not shown here. As the effects of global warming

Main article: Global warming


The predicted effects of global warming on the environment and for human life are numerous and varied. It is generally difficult to attribute specific natural phenomena to long-term causes, but some effects of
 and our accelerating consumption of natural resources grow daily more apparent, Burtynsky's pictures serve as bracing reminders that "progress" is invariably in·var·i·a·ble  
adj.
Not changing or subject to change; constant.



in·vari·a·bil
 shadowed by ecological degradation.

Included in the exhibition were a few examples from each of the artist's other well-known series--shots of mines and quarries in Vermont, Ontario, and Carrara, Italy; oil fields and refineries in Ontario and California; automotive-waste dumps (or "urban mines," as Burtynsky calls them) in the U.S. and Canada; and Bangladeshi workers breaking down decommissioned ships. These were displayed in a compact gallery with low lighting and muted gray walls, which suggested the presentation of a formalized history. The knowledge that Leland Stanford Sr., the university's cofounder co·found  
tr.v. co·found·ed, co·found·ing, co·founds
To establish or found in concert with another or others.



co·found
, was a railroad baron who made part of his fortune by dealing with Gold Rush miners, and had flip-flopping policies on immigrant labor, added to the complexity of the show.

But as all this visual and verbal information, some of which was communicated in a videotaped interview with the artist, compounded itself, it became increasingly difficult to know how to respond to the work. How, for example, should one approach Nickel Tailings #34, Sudbury, Ontario, and Nickel Tailings #35, Sudbury, Ontario (both 1996), a memorably dramatic diptych that shows rivers polluted to a glowing, lavalike orange, a visually stunning but nonetheless poisonous result of nickel mining? The scenes are at once seductive and repellent, a condition common in Burtynsky's oeuvre. Such images are formally assured, but their underlying subjects and intentions remain, productively, problematic.
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Article Details
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Author:Helfand, Glen
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:526
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