CHINA
The Next Industrial Revolution
Edward Burtynsky
Hardbound, 15" x 12",
180 pages
80 color illustrations
2006, Steidl
Text by Michael Torosian
From the Publisher:
Edward Burtynsky’s imagery explores
the intricate link between industry and nature, combining
the raw elements of mining, quarrying, shipping, oil production,
and recycling into eloquent, highly expressive visions that
find beauty and humanity in the most unlikely places. These
images are metaphors for the dilemma of our modern existence:
we are drawn by desire-the desire to live well and in comfort-yet
we all know that the world is suffering to meet those demands.
Our dependence on nature to provide the materials for our
consumption and our concern for the health of our planet sets
us into uneasy contradiction and feeds the dialogue in Burtynsky’s
images between attraction and repulsion, seduction and fear.
Burtynsky’s latest body of work gives
visual form to the industrial and urban transformation of
China, a place where industrial forces are gathering on a
scale that the world has never experienced before. If the
earth’s resources were up to now under siege through
western colonialism and technological progress, then China
is on the brink of a sweeping assault on the planet’s
ecosystem that is only just forming and is nowhere close to
expressing its full impact.
See: Manufactured
Landscapes (2003) |