Post Edit Home Help

Key Pages

Home |
Contact |
- |
Metamedia |
Classes |
- |
Presence |
Life Squared |
- |
Weblog |
Archaeography |
Chorography |
Traumwerk |
Animating the archive |
Figure and Ground |
- |
Research and Projects |
Writing |
Galleries |
Photoblogs |
Resumé |
- |
- |
RSS

Changes [11:58]

Whiteboards
Stanford Strategy C...
Photoblogs
Home
Archaeology and the...
Ten Things
short biographies
   More Changes...
Changes [11:58]: Whiteboards, Stanford Strategy C..., Photoblogs, Home, ... MORE

Find Pages

http://burtynsky.stanford.edu

Uploaded Image

June - September 2005 The Cantor Arts Center at Stanford hosted an exhibition of the photographs of Edward Burtynsky.

To accompany this we built a web site that would let visitors (personal or digital) study and comment on the pictures.

Burtynsky works in large format - the pictures are up to 5 feet across. His subjects are envrionmental impacts. Great holes in the ground like open cast mines and quarries. Wasted landscapes - his series of rivers running blood red polluted with toxic mineral waste is extraordinary. Landfill sites - urban mines as he calls them. Sites of epic industrial spectacle - the beach shipbreakers of Bangladesh, oil refineries.

There is plenty of environmental politics here. As well as simply awesome pictures of huge holes in the ground.

Susan Cameron, Phil Dhingra, Annie Wyman, Erica Simmons, Bill Rathje and myself ran a commentary on the photographs exploring what we saw as the contemporary sublime in Burtynsky’s archaeography. The web site attracted 70,000 visitors over the three month exhibition, many of whom left their own comments and got involved in the discussion.

Edit this Page - Attach File - Add Image - References - Print
Page last modified: Wed Apr 23/2008 21:59
You must signin to post comments.
Site Home > Michael Shanks > Burtynsky at Stanford