``` 爱德华·伯廷斯基的警告 ```
Edward Burtynsky's Warning

原始链接: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/2025/12/edward-burtynsky-photographs/684604/

加拿大摄影师爱德华·伯廷斯基以记录人类对环境的巨大影响而闻名,捕捉如大型工业场所和资源开采区域等“改变的景观”。一次关键的经历是在加利福尼亚拍摄了一座巨大的轮胎堆,那是一个超现实的场景,后来引发了一场破坏性的、污染性的火灾。 然而,自2012年以来,伯廷斯基将这些破坏的描绘与旨在激发希望的“原始景观”图像相平衡。他最近的作品聚焦于澳大利亚的鲨鱼湾,这是一个联合国教科文组织世界遗产地,以其古老的叠层石而闻名——地球上已知的最古老的化石。 与他以前的作品不同,伯廷斯基仅从空中拍摄鲨鱼湾,刻意避免对未受破坏的环境造成物理影响。这种转变反映了他展示自然之美和韧性的愿望,为人类改造的严峻现实提供了一个对比。

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原文

The Canadian photographer Edward Burtynsky has built a career documenting what he calls “altered landscapes”—tangled highway overpasses, sprawling oil refineries, mountainsides pockmarked by human exploitation. In 1999, he visited a tire-disposal site outside Modesto, California. It was surreal, he told me, almost sublime. He felt as if he had entered an entirely synthetic world: millions of tires stacked some five stories into the air, rubber hedgerows stretching to the horizon.

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A few months later, the tire pile was struck by lightning and burst into flames. The fire burned as hot as 2,000 degrees and filled the sky with a thick black smoke. After a month, it was at last extinguished, but the tires had melted into more than 250,000 gallons of molten oil that risked seeping into the soil and local water supply. Despite their unlikely beauty, Burtynsky’s altered landscapes have always functioned in part as a warning.

aerial photograph of otherworldly shoreline with shades of black, gray, and blues

Edward Burtynsky / Howard Greenberg Gallery NY

Shell Beach #4; Shark Bay, Australia, 2025

But since 2012, Burtynsky has tried to dedicate time each year to photographing “pristine landscapes,” capturing images of nature that inspire something more like hope. Earlier this year, he traveled to Shark Bay, a UNESCO World Heritage Site at Australia’s farthest-western point. The bay is famous for the stromatolites studding its shore, layered rock structures formed over thousands of years by microorganisms that grow, die, and calcify with sediment into marine mushroom caps. Stromatolites are considered the oldest-known fossils on the planet, a living record; some in Shark Bay would have witnessed a time before humans invented the tire—or the wheel. Burtynsky viewed the stromatolites and the rest of Shark Bay’s coastline only from the air, angling his camera out of the passenger window of a Cessna 210. The ground, he left untouched.


This article appears in the December 2025 print edition with the headline “Wheels Up.”

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