Edward Burtynsky's Photographs at Cantor Arts Center
Monday, 04 July 2005 11:13
STANFORD, CA.- The Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University announces a major retrospective of the work of internationally-renowned photographer Edward Burtynsky . Manufactured Landscapes: The Photographs of Edward Burtynsky features approximately 30 large-scale color works by the Canadian photographer, depicting unfamiliar places where industrial activity has reshaped the surface of the land—landscapes created by mining, quarrying, railcutting, recycling, oil refining, and shipbreaking.
"While Burtynsky's photographs may be disturbing, they also have an unexpected beauty, subverting our usual notions of the sublime in nature," said Hilarie Faberman, the Cantor Arts Center curator responsible for the exhibition's presentation at Stanford. "This is the first major examination of Burtynsky's work, bringing together works from both public and private collections, and we are pleased to be able present it here." Over the past 25 years, Burtynsky has explored unfamiliar places of modern industrial activity. The artist, who says he is "fascinated by what we use and how we get it," has been examining the intersections between land and technology both for their inherent, unorthodox beauty and for the ways in which they reflect the culture that created them. His photographs are not intended to alert us to the devastation caused by industry, nor are they meant to celebrate the achievements of technological progress. They serve to reconnect viewers to the aspects of manufacturing and technological production that are usually ignored or at least rarely considered. At the same time, those photographs challenge viewers to redefine their concept of what constitutes a landscape.
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