Top 25 Edward Burtynsky Quotes

Words matter. These are the best Edward Burtynsky Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.

My father was an amateur oil painter, so some of his oi

My father was an amateur oil painter, so some of his oil paintings were on our walls. There was one above the piano of a famous Ukrainian poet, Taras Shevchenko, playing an instrument known as a bandura. I remember that one kind of resonated with me; it was always central in the living room.
Edward Burtynsky
I love the tones of browns and grays – I love more neutral tones. That’s why I like going to the desert and working in the desert. I find that green trees and things like that have a tendency to lock us into a certain way of seeing.
Edward Burtynsky
Sometimes you don’t know why you’re doing something. You’re intuitively following, to see where it leads.
Edward Burtynsky
Wherever you disrupt water from its natural cycle, there’s always a winner and a loser. Whoever is the one it’s directed towards is the winner, and whoever loses that water is the loser.
Edward Burtynsky
If you look at photojournalism, it’s largely driven by current events… always chasing a crisis or disaster. I follow a narrative that is much looser than current events.
Edward Burtynsky
Digital photography and Photoshop have made it very easy for people to take pictures. It’s a medium that allows a lot of mediocre stuff to get through.
Edward Burtynsky
We have extracted from the land from the moment we stood on two feet. We are working to supply the kinds of materials that are necessary for the lives we’ve built for ourselves.
Edward Burtynsky
I had to work to put myself through school, so I always worked in the heaviest industries I could find because that’s who paid the best.
Edward Burtynsky
One thing that’s consistent in all of my work is that these aren’t accidents; they’re all conscious landscapes. They’re all things that we’re doing and that we have done through our legal and social systems and structures of capitalism.
Edward Burtynsky
In our ephemeral information age, people think we’ve left behind the stone, bronze, and iron ages. But they’re all still going on – we use tonnes of this stuff every day. You just have to look.
Edward Burtynsky
All of my work comes out of a deep concern for human expansion into the landscape.
Edward Burtynsky
I like to think of Photography 1.0 as the invention of photography. Photography 2.0 is digital technology and the move from film and paper to everything on a chip. Photography 3.0 is the use of the camera, space, and color and to capture an object in the third dimension.
Edward Burtynsky
As artists, we can help, visually and intellectually, to make people understand that, at some point, we have to accept that it is our collective impact that is putting the whole planet in jeopardy.
Edward Burtynsky
I have always been interested in following the technology that I feel are presenting themselves as true industry and innovation.
Edward Burtynsky
These landscapes aren’t breaking news or necessarily even illegal. These are intentional, purposeful landscapes, whether to extend our cities or build a mine or put a road in or clear a forest. I’ve been photographing that which has been intended by us; it’s not an accident.
Edward Burtynsky
I wish my artwork could persuade millions of people to join a global conversation about sustainability.
Edward Burtynsky
To me, Los Angeles was the invention of the suburb. They figured it out and perfected it and created a city that was dependent on the automobile.
Edward Burtynsky
Water, like many other resources, is harvested, transported and used throughout all aspects of society. Unlike other resources, water is critical to the survival of all forms of life. The underlying question that sits at the core of my exploration is to what degree can we shape water before it begins to shape us.
Edward Burtynsky
Good governance takes behavior that is negative or not helpful to the greater good of society, whether it’s polluting behaviour, plastics, or whatever, and taxes the behaviour.
Edward Burtynsky
I’m working in this very complex set of issues having to do with who we are as a species and how much we can do to the Earth before it starts to buckle under. My work can easily read as an indictment, but I don’t see it as that simple a problem.
Edward Burtynsky
The bigger question is how does a rogue species called humans – whose population just blew through the seven billion mark on it’s way to nine billion members – manage to survive the next century on a planet with finite resources, without destroying its delicate balance in the process.
Edward Burtynsky
No water equals no life. We can have no oil; it’s fine. No water – there is no plan b with no water.
Edward Burtynsky
I’m trying to photograph an old offshore oil city that is lying in decay in the Caspian Sea, but I’ve been having a hard time getting there.
Edward Burtynsky
Our planetary system is affected by a magnitude of force as powerful as any naturally occurring global catastrophe, but one caused solely by a single species: us.
Edward Burtynsky
I have a fondness for when the landscape becomes surreal.
Edward Burtynsky