At the Robert Koch Gallery,
Edward Burtynsky: Recent Releases brings renewed attention to a body of work that has quietly shaped the visual language of environmental photography for decades. The exhibition revisits key early images, now presented in a markedly larger format—up to 72 inches wide—finally aligning with the scale the artist originally envisioned but could not technically achieve at the time. The shift in size does more than amplify detail; it alters the physical encounter with landscapes already defined by their monumental character.
Printed without borders and issued in tightly controlled editions, these works re-emerge alongside Burtynsky’s more recent photographs, creating a dialogue across time. His images, often taken from elevated vantage points, map the vast imprint of industry on the land—quarries carved into geometric terraces, oil fields stretching toward abstraction, and water systems redirected by human ambition. What distinguishes Burtynsky’s approach is not only the clarity of his compositions but their ambiguity: beauty and devastation coexist within the same frame, resisting simple moral conclusions.
This tension has long defined his practice. Since the late 20th century, Burtynsky has documented sites of extraction and production across the globe, from shipbreaking yards in Bangladesh to lithium evaporation ponds in South America. His work circulates widely in major museum collections, reflecting both its aesthetic appeal and its documentary weight. Recent institutional exhibitions, including a large-scale survey in New York, have reaffirmed his role as a key interpreter of the so-called Anthropocene.
Yet the exhibition in San Francisco feels less like a retrospective than a recalibration. By returning to earlier images with contemporary production techniques,
Edward Burtynsky underscores a persistent idea: that landscapes altered by industry are not static ruins, but evolving terrains. In these photographs, traces of human intervention remain visible, even as nature begins its slow, uncertain process of reclaiming space.
Image:
Rock of Ages #15, Active Section, E.L. Smith Quarry, Barre, Vermont, USA, 1992 © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy of the Robert Koch Gallery