tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38446021.post6630037797266019453..comments2024-01-08T00:59:52.091-07:00Comments on muse-ings: Edward Burtynsky and politicsUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38446021.post-91063954862044095842007-06-28T00:09:00.000-06:002007-06-28T00:09:00.000-06:00Burtynsky leaves me cold. Maybe it's the imperious...Burtynsky leaves me cold. Maybe it's the imperious aerial eagle's lair POV, or the emotional distance he imposes between the viewer and subject. Returning to the portrait-distance thing, in the case of Evans, he brilliantly used it as a kind of one-way insulation through which his analytical tendrils could safely probe the subject without risking over-exposing his considerable restrained passions. Burtynsky is unable to get through his own insulation, and so am I.<BR/><BR/> [ I disagree with the notion that China was seduced by Western ideals. More like forced to compete in Western markets for its survival.]<BR/><BR/>--- LuisLuishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14942782882001678270noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38446021.post-63219591548617832802007-06-26T10:01:00.000-06:002007-06-26T10:01:00.000-06:00Non committal?Only if you haven't read his Artist ...Non committal?<BR/><BR/>Only if you haven't read his Artist Statement in his China book - <BR/><BR/><I>For 25 years I created images about the manmade transformations our civilization has imposed upon the nature ... I have become anxiously aware of the consequences our actions are having upon the world ... As a husband and father ... I feel an urgency to make people aware of important things that are at stake ... what we give to the future are the choices we make today ... China is the most recent participant to be seduced by western ideals - the hollow promise of fulfillment and happiness through material gain ... the troublind downside of this is ... the mass consumerism these ideals ignite and the resulting degradation of our environment intrinsic to the process of making things ... [it] should be of concern to all.</I><BR/><BR/>Of course, he didn't need to tell me that becuase I see it all in his pictures.gravitas et nugalishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14490244858742224956noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38446021.post-78938210695667697412007-06-25T12:29:00.000-06:002007-06-25T12:29:00.000-06:00Non-committal? Conflicted, maybe, but I don't thin...Non-committal? Conflicted, maybe, but I don't think he's non-committal. I think Burtynsky feels that the balance of waste, recycling, consumption, Third World employment make for a complex subject, more complex than is typically presented by the activists on all sides.<BR/><BR/>A good example in terms of this sort of documentarianism is W. Eugene Smith who was a war photographer but also documented the effects of industrial pollution in the Japanese village of Minamata. Smith always felt the photographer had to have a point of view. Commitment was not optional, it was essential.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com