David Burdeny: Svanire 2010 - 2018
to
Herringer Kiss Gallery 101-1615 10 Avenue SW, Calgary, Alberta T3C 0J7
David Burdeny, "Spanish Steps, Rome, IT," 2018
archival pigment print on dibond, 44" x 55"
Opening Reception Saturday, February 9th from 2 to 5 pm. Artist in Attendance.
David Burdeny (b. 1968. Winnipeg, Canada) graduated with a Masters in Architecture and Interior Design and spent the early part of his career practicing in his field before establishing himself as a photographer. Burdeny translates his intimate appreciation for the structure, details and metaphorical value of space into sublime observations on how the contemporary world is still pregnant with mystery and potential. His early work of square-format black and white images rendered space in stark, elemental terms. The spare landscapes seemed modeled to serve as liminal spaces - as thresholds and portals and points of departure that lead the viewer to a complex intimacy with the expressive force of empirical awareness. In subsequent series, Burdeny has explored both opulent and austere interior scenes that use the sensuality of colour to full effect. Whether focused on ordinary spaces or iconic settings, Burdeny's photographs occupy an artistic middle ground between the physical and the atmospheric, the concrete and the spiritual, the actual and the idealized. They represent not strictly what he found but his personal experience of these enigmatic and luminous locations.
Burdeny has featured his photographic series in numerous solo and group exhibitions in Canada, the US and throughout Europe. His work has also been widely published - including most recently; Casa Vogue, The Guardian, The Corriere Dela Sera and the Moscow Times - and has been recognized with multiple International Photography Awards. In 2015, David won “Nature Photographer of the Year” for his series, Salt and in the 2016 he won “(Special) Photographer of the Year” for his Tulip Series, both at the International Photography Awards in New York City. David Burdeny lives in Delta, B.C. and works from his studio in Vancouver.
The photographs from the Svanire Series were made in some of Egypt, France and Italy's most iconic locations. Taken between the years 2010 - 2018, many of them are being made available for the first time. In these photographs, static elements slowly build within the frame during an extended daytime exposure, while dynamic elements trace a passage between buildings and along pathways. Several are multiple exposures taken over the course of a day and later recomposed into a single frame. This tension between motion and status is the heart of this series – space and time in parallax - merging and slipping together like two gears. I see each image as diagram for how we experience the world - that which our minds imagine, what our physical bodies experience and the lived experiences it projects back at us.