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FINAL DAYS TO WIN A SOLO EXHIBITION IN MAY 2026
FINAL DAYS TO WIN A SOLO EXHIBITION IN MAY 2026

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Photographer: Edward Burtynsky

By Edward Burtynsky, Jennifer Baichwal & Nicholas de Pencier

Publisher: Steidl
Publication date: June 2026
Print length: 232 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
The Anthropocene project represents a monumental collaboration between photographer Edward Burtynsky and filmmakers Jennifer Baichwal and Nicholas de Pencier, offering a stark visual record of the current geological epoch. The term itself refers to the period during which human activity emerged as the dominant influence on climate and the environment, a concept this multidisciplinary work explores with clinical precision. This new edition of the previously out-of-print volume serves as a central pillar of the initiative, blending traditional photography with snapshots of video installations and augmented reality experiences. Through this synthesis of media, the authors document a world reshaped by "technofossils"—the human-made artifacts that will persist in the strata of the earth long after civilization has moved on.

Burtynsky’s photographs move through various global landscapes, from the marble quarries of Carrara to the lithium evaporation ponds in the Atacama Desert. These images illustrate the concept of terraforming, where the scale of human engineering rivals natural geological forces. The book provides a trenchant analysis of how the extraction of resources and the expansion of urban centers have fundamentally altered the biological and chemical composition of the planet. Accompanying the visual data are specially commissioned poems by Margaret Atwood and a series of scientific essays, which provide a literary and empirical framework for the imagery. This layering of art and science helps to translate abstract environmental statistics into a visceral, unsettling reality.

As a document of humanity’s indelible mark on the earth, Anthropocene focuses on the themes of extinction and permanent environmental transformation. The project highlights the destruction of coral reefs and the massive deforestation of the tropics, framing these losses not just as ecological tragedies but as permanent shifts in the earth’s history. By incorporating technological elements like AR, the work bridges the gap between the observer and the observed, making the scale of industrial impact inescapable. The resulting volume stands as a definitive artistic response to the climate crisis, challenging the viewer to confront the lasting legacy of the human species within the deep time of the geological record.

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