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Author Topic: Manufactured Landscapes  (Read 64 times)
Steven
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« on: February 29, 2008, 02:07:17 AM »

Ever wonder where everything we consume comes from, and goes to after we're through with it? I was reading the Manitoban today and saw that the Winnipeg Art Gallery was showing an exhibition of photographs by Edward Burtynsky. I've seen his photographs (the nickel tailings one especially) in books (there's also a documentary film called "Manufactured Landscapes") so I think I'm going to have to see this exhibition.

In a way, they are strangely beautiful. They show something that we rarely see or acknowledge; that our patterns of consumption utterly transform the landscape in which we live. Yet, it is left up to the viewer to decide what they mean. Here are a few:

Nickel Tailings No. 34,
Sudbury, Ontario 1996


Nickel Tailings No. 36,
Sudbury, Ontario 1996


Westar Open Pit Coal Mine No. 19,
Sparwood, British Columbia 1985


Iberia Quarries # 1,
Marmetal Co., Borba, Portugal, 2006


Oxford Tire Pile No. 7,
Westley, California 1999


Oil Fields No. 24,
Oil Sands, Fort McMurray, Alberta 2001


Oil Fields No. 2,
Belridge, California 2002


China Recycling #9,
Circuit Boards, Guiyu, Guangdong Province, 2004


Tanggu Port,
Tianjin, 2005


Manufacturing #10A & 10B,
Cankun Factory, Xiamen City, 2005
« Last Edit: February 29, 2008, 02:09:07 AM by Steve Coutts » Logged

"If you have a milkshake and I have a milkshake—there it is. That’s the straw, you see. And my straw reaches acrooooooossssss the room … I … drink … your … milkshake! I drink it up!"
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