
© Edward Burtynsky/Courtesy of Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York/Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto
SOCAR Oil Fields #3, Baku, Azerbaijan 2006
Whether photographing a shoe factory in China, a rock quarry in Portugal or a copper mine in Chile, Edward Burtynsky creates images that use scale to consider the magnitude of human industry and its impact on the landscape. “To me, what’s interesting as art is to begin to define that theater of industry that is almost beyond our imagination,” Burtynsky says.
His most recent long-term project, OIL, is currently showing simultaneously at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., at Hasted Hunt Kraeutler in New York and at Nicholas Metivier Gallery in Toronto. The project was also recently released as a book by Steidl. OIL isn’t meant as an encompassing documentation of the vast global oil production system. Instead it focuses on major themes—oil extraction and refinement, “motor culture,” and the eventual end of the production and consumption of oil.
Burtynsky chose what to photograph after “meditating on the idea of oil and what it’s done to build our world.” Burtynsky felt Los Angeles, where freeway systems and suburbia originated, was important to the work, so he used a helicopter to photograph the city and its major traffic arteries. He also created a sub-essay on Detroit, the “cradle of the automobile.”
A believer in the concept of “Peak Oil”—the point at which global oil production will hit its apex and supplies will rapidly dissapear to calamitous effect—Burtynsky chose to photograph the rapidly growing Las Vegas suburbs and recreational activities like NASCAR races and the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally to look at oil-fueled culture before they're obsolete. He explains, “My thought was, if we are at that crest [in the oil supply], and many believe we are cresting, what are the kinds of things that I can photograph today that may not be here in 50 years?”
He photographed California’s oil fields, where the first massive discoveries of oil fueled the development of the automotive industry. Those images, along with photographs of oil fields in Alberta and refineries in Ontario and Texas, represent current extraction and production infrastructure.
What will the world look like after oil is used up? Burtynsky found the answer in Azerbijan were he photographed former oil fields and offshore rigs abandoned by the Soviets after the deposits were sucked dry. He photographed a repository for decommissioned military aircraft, which sit in vast rows in the Arizona desert. Scenes of shipbreaking in Bangladesh, and photographs of mountains of old tires and automobile parts also hint at life after oil.
Though Burtynsky prefers to leave his images open to interpretation, the urgency of the subject of oil pushes him toward advocacy, he says. “We need to pay attention, this is now, and if our head’s in the sand and we don’t think that we have a problem, we better get it out of the sand quick.”



























