Edward Burtynsky's stunning photographs manage to be both beautiful and simultaneously horrifying, and film director Jennifer Baichwal has managed to capture both the aesthetic and concept behind Burtynsky's ground-breaking photography in her recently-debuted
Edward Burtynsky is Canada’s most respected photographers known for his remarkable photographic depictions of global industrial landscapes ...
In his large-scale projects, Canadian photographer Ed Burtynsky considers the impact of man on the natural world. In this gallery of images and a TED Talk, filmed in Vancouver in 2014, he introduce…
Julia Johnston and Ed Burtynsky attend the dinner celebration of the TIFF World Premiere of the documentary of "The Gospel According to Andre" on September 8, 2017 in Toronto, Canada.
FacebookTweet Ed’s Camera Gear Continuing my interview with Ed Burtynsky, we talk about every photographer’s favorite subject, cameras. Ed shares with us his evolution of...
Photo Basel was cancelled in June due to the pandemic – but here’s a fresh chance to see the shots of sweaty kisses and socialist villages which will be showing in Berlin instead
Ed Burtynsky’s Water project is a jaw-dropping survey in photos and film about the most essential substance to life on Earth.
Edward Burtynsky is a Canadian photographer and artist who has achieved international recognition for his large-format photographs of indus...
Created by climate crisis charity Project Pressure, MELTDOWN – a visualisation of climate change has opened at Natural History Museum of Vienna
Edward Burtynsky’s near-abstract photography documents the countless ways that water shapes our landscapes.
Learn how the climate crisis impacts our health, our weather, our food supply, and our coastal cities – and what we can do to help reverse it.
Edward Burtynsky is Canada’s most respected photographers known for his remarkable photographic depictions of global industrial landscapes ...
There are two things that I surprisingly completed before the end of school year and leaving for the Northwest. One of them was read Ed Burtynsky's Water (reviewed here by Blake Andrews). Most of his artwork is political and it was unexpected that many of the photographs focused on formal qualities. I have a connection to all of the images below, whether it is an action (Xialangdi Dam...), a location (Texas), an area I long to visit (Georgian Bay), or return (Spain and Mexico). Making a subject entrenched in political and environmental discourse into an abstraction is currently of great interest. Ed Burtynsky, Xialangdi Dam #1, Yellow River, Henan Province, China, 2011 Ed Burtynsky, Pivot Irrigation #25, High Plains, Texas Panhandle, 2011 Ed Burtynsky, Pivot Irrigation, High Plains #8, High Plains, Texas Panhandle, 2011 Ed Burtynsky, Georgian Bay #1, Four Winds, Pointe-Au-Baril, Ontario, Canada, 2009 Ed Burtynsky, Cerro Prieto Geothermal Power Station, Baja Mexico, 2012 Ed Burtynsky, Artemia Salterns, Gulf of California, Sonora, Mexico, 2012 Ed Burtynsky, Colorado River Delta #2 (near San Felipe, Baja, Mexico), 2012 Ed Burtynsky, Benidorm #1, Spain, 2010
Here is some Art by Edward Burtynsky. You can see all the originals on his website Below is his statement, followed by his works. Exploring the Residual Landscape Nature transformed through industr…
Edward Burtynsky is Canada’s most respected photographers known for his remarkable photographic depictions of global industrial landscapes ...
"Manufactured Landscapes": An Interview with Ed Burtynsky John K. Grande : What made you decide to start your photo lab, Toronto Image Works? Ed Burtynsky : When I graduated from Ryerson Polytechnic, there was no access to professional darkrooms in Toronto. After four years of working at home