
“ICP has long championed 'concerned photography'—imagery that informs and inspires action—which aligns deeply with my own practice,” said Edward Burtynsky. “At such a critical moment in time, I hope this work sparks meaningful dialogue about our relationship with the planet and brings more people to this awareness.”
The exhibition title, The Great Acceleration, is an established term used to describe the rapid rise of human impact on our planet according to a range of measures, among them population growth, water usage, transportation, greenhouse gas emissions, resource extraction and food production, each of which Burtynsky has photographed the outward signs of at length and in great detail over the past forty years. From open pit mines across North America to oil derricks in Azerbaijan, from rice terraces in China to oil bunkering in Nigeria, Burtynsky has travelled across the world and back again as part of his restless and seemingly inexhaustible drive to discover the ways, both old and new, that organized human activity has transformed the natural world. Though already unified by both the precision and formal beauty that Burtynsky deploys to create each photograph, The Great Acceleration further underscores that, like their respective subjects, each project remains fundamentally interconnected.
“ICP is dedicated to championing work that addresses critical issues of our time, so we are delighted to exhibit Edward’s work,” said David Campany, ICP’s Creative Director. “Conceived especially for our largest galleries, The Great Acceleration will present suites of monumental images that draw attention to the severity of the impact we are having on the planet, while also offering a contemplative space for reflecting upon photography’s role and potential today.”
Since the 1980s Burtynsky has remained steadfast in his commitment to document the evolving relationship between contemporary life and the landscapes being remade by its demands. Beginning in his native Canada, the exhibition quickly moves to establish the international scope of his work while also highlighting the recurring subjects and themes that have continued to occupy him—including the intertwining of fossil fuels and consumerism, global infrastructure, precarious labor conditions and the challenges of mass recycling, among others—regardless of where he has worked or with what new technologies.
Moving through the exhibition, we follow Burtynsky into marble quarries and factories, into mining towns and industrialized farms. With him as our guide, we traverse across mega cities and barren landscapes, across scrap yards and factories. Though widely known for his aerial photographs that present epic views of the landscape, within which human presence can be seen but loosely felt, Burtynsky just as often documents our collective activity up close and with disarming intensity. Included in this exhibition are rarely-seen portraits he has made over the years of workers from around the world, from factories in China to the shipbreaking coasts of Bangladesh, which remind us of the intimately human scale at the heart of what his photographs often show us from great distances.
The physical scale and thematic scope of The Great Acceleration will unfold throughout both floors of ICP’s galleries, making it an exhibition that demands an in-person experience, one that allows us to sit with the overwhelming beauty of the natural landscape just as we consider the necessary changes to our myriad ‘business as usual’ operations that will empower and inspire a sustainable future.
“ICP has long championed 'concerned photography'—imagery that informs and inspires action—which aligns deeply with my own practice,” said Edward Burtynsky. “At such a critical moment in time, I hope this work sparks meaningful dialogue about our relationship with the planet and brings more people to this awareness.”
The exhibition title, The Great Acceleration, is an established term used to describe the rapid rise of human impact on our planet according to a range of measures, among them population growth, water usage, transportation, greenhouse gas emissions, resource extraction and food production, each of which Burtynsky has photographed the outward signs of at length and in great detail over the past forty years. From open pit mines across North America to oil derricks in Azerbaijan, from rice terraces in China to oil bunkering in Nigeria, Burtynsky has travelled across the world and back again as part of his restless and seemingly inexhaustible drive to discover the ways, both old and new, that organized human activity has transformed the natural world. Though already unified by both the precision and formal beauty that Burtynsky deploys to create each photograph, The Great Acceleration further underscores that, like their respective subjects, each project remains fundamentally interconnected.
“ICP is dedicated to championing work that addresses critical issues of our time, so we are delighted to exhibit Edward’s work,” said David Campany, ICP’s Creative Director. “Conceived especially for our largest galleries, The Great Acceleration will present suites of monumental images that draw attention to the severity of the impact we are having on the planet, while also offering a contemplative space for reflecting upon photography’s role and potential today.”
Since the 1980s Burtynsky has remained steadfast in his commitment to document the evolving relationship between contemporary life and the landscapes being remade by its demands. Beginning in his native Canada, the exhibition quickly moves to establish the international scope of his work while also highlighting the recurring subjects and themes that have continued to occupy him—including the intertwining of fossil fuels and consumerism, global infrastructure, precarious labor conditions and the challenges of mass recycling, among others—regardless of where he has worked or with what new technologies.
Moving through the exhibition, we follow Burtynsky into marble quarries and factories, into mining towns and industrialized farms. With him as our guide, we traverse across mega cities and barren landscapes, across scrap yards and factories. Though widely known for his aerial photographs that present epic views of the landscape, within which human presence can be seen but loosely felt, Burtynsky just as often documents our collective activity up close and with disarming intensity. Included in this exhibition are rarely-seen portraits he has made over the years of workers from around the world, from factories in China to the shipbreaking coasts of Bangladesh, which remind us of the intimately human scale at the heart of what his photographs often show us from great distances.
The physical scale and thematic scope of The Great Acceleration will unfold throughout both floors of ICP’s galleries, making it an exhibition that demands an in-person experience, one that allows us to sit with the overwhelming beauty of the natural landscape just as we consider the necessary changes to our myriad ‘business as usual’ operations that will empower and inspire a sustainable future.
“ICP has long championed 'concerned photography'—imagery that informs and inspires action—which aligns deeply with my own practice,” said Edward Burtynsky. “At such a critical moment in time, I hope this work sparks meaningful dialogue about our relationship with the planet and brings more people to this awareness.”
The exhibition title, The Great Acceleration, is an established term used to describe the rapid rise of human impact on our planet according to a range of measures, among them population growth, water usage, transportation, greenhouse gas emissions, resource extraction and food production, each of which Burtynsky has photographed the outward signs of at length and in great detail over the past forty years. From open pit mines across North America to oil derricks in Azerbaijan, from rice terraces in China to oil bunkering in Nigeria, Burtynsky has travelled across the world and back again as part of his restless and seemingly inexhaustible drive to discover the ways, both old and new, that organized human activity has transformed the natural world. Though already unified by both the precision and formal beauty that Burtynsky deploys to create each photograph, The Great Acceleration further underscores that, like their respective subjects, each project remains fundamentally interconnected.
“ICP is dedicated to championing work that addresses critical issues of our time, so we are delighted to exhibit Edward’s work,” said David Campany, ICP’s Creative Director. “Conceived especially for our largest galleries, The Great Acceleration will present suites of monumental images that draw attention to the severity of the impact we are having on the planet, while also offering a contemplative space for reflecting upon photography’s role and potential today.”
Since the 1980s Burtynsky has remained steadfast in his commitment to document the evolving relationship between contemporary life and the landscapes being remade by its demands. Beginning in his native Canada, the exhibition quickly moves to establish the international scope of his work while also highlighting the recurring subjects and themes that have continued to occupy him—including the intertwining of fossil fuels and consumerism, global infrastructure, precarious labor conditions and the challenges of mass recycling, among others—regardless of where he has worked or with what new technologies.
Moving through the exhibition, we follow Burtynsky into marble quarries and factories, into mining towns and industrialized farms. With him as our guide, we traverse across mega cities and barren landscapes, across scrap yards and factories. Though widely known for his aerial photographs that present epic views of the landscape, within which human presence can be seen but loosely felt, Burtynsky just as often documents our collective activity up close and with disarming intensity. Included in this exhibition are rarely-seen portraits he has made over the years of workers from around the world, from factories in China to the shipbreaking coasts of Bangladesh, which remind us of the intimately human scale at the heart of what his photographs often show us from great distances.
The physical scale and thematic scope of The Great Acceleration will unfold throughout both floors of ICP’s galleries, making it an exhibition that demands an in-person experience, one that allows us to sit with the overwhelming beauty of the natural landscape just as we consider the necessary changes to our myriad ‘business as usual’ operations that will empower and inspire a sustainable future.