NEWS HUB

Behind the Apparent Beauty of Burtynsky's Shots

By Maurita Cardone
Il Giornale Dell’arte

With over 70 photographs, "The Great Acceleration," at the International Center of Photography in New York, reflects on the increasingly profound marks left by humanity on the planet. What at first glance appears formally beautiful is actually the scar left by consumption.

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Edward Burtynsky: 'Abstraction/Extraction'

TimeOut London

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

All the things that make modern life tick – the mines for our batteries, the farms for our food, the abattoirs for our meat – are kept secret, out of view because they lay bare the damage we’re doing to the planet. Burtynsky’s vast, mega-scale photographs here at the Saatchi Gallery (there’s a concurrent, free, smaller show of his work at Flowers Gallery too) drag those private shames out into the open. He photographs salt marshes carving up the Spanish coastline, gold mines spilling cyanide into the Johannesburg’s groundwater, circular crops sucking Saudi Arabia’s aquifers dry, diamond mines leaking toxic waste into the hills of South Africa.

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