SOCAR Oil Fields #3, Baku, Azerbaijan, 2006. Chromogenic colour print. Edward Burtynsky / Nicholas Metivier Gallery
Oil Fields #22, Cold Lake Production Project, Cold Lake, Alberta, Canada, 2001. Chromogenic colour print. Edward Burtynsky / Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC
SOCAR Oil Fields #3, Baku, Azerbaijan, 2006. Chromogenic colour print. Edward Burtynsky / Nicholas Metivier Gallery Oil Fields #22, Cold Lake Production Project, Cold Lake, Alberta, Canada, 2001. ChroShow more

Oil on canvas: Edward Burtynsky's pictures of 'oil' and all its manifestations



The spectacles of consumption on display in Edward Burtynsky's pictures of 'oil' and all its manifestations are ecologically worthy but visually indulgent, Geoff Dyer writes. Whether seen on the walls of the Corcoran Gallery in Washington or in the accompanying book published by Steidl, the photographs in Oil bring the viewer face to face with huge and troubling questions. How can we go on producing on this scale? How can we go on consuming like this? Aren't we at the point where we say, OK, enough is enough? Is it sustainable, the level of luxury and lavishness to which we have become accustomed? In short, how many more of these high-concept, high-value Edward Burtynsky productions can we take?

I am being only slightly facetious. Burtynsky (born in Ontario, Canada in 1955) hit his stride in the mid-1980s with series of large format, colour views of railcuts and mines, places where raw nature had been scarred and gorged by the agents of economic progress. What resulted, however, was not simply maiming or devastation but a source of potential wonder: an extension of Edmund Burke's notion of the sublime - itself radically altered by several hundred years of excavation and appropriation - into the realm of the man-ravaged. By the time that his work was collected into a 2003 retrospective and an accompanying book, , Burtynsky had extended his range to cover quarries, ship-breaking in Bangladesh, oilfields, refineries, and compacted mounds of trash.

Burtynsky's work has obvious similarities with that of other artist-photographers. Like Richard Misrach (who, in the Bravo 20 instalment of his ongoing Desert Cantos project, photographed an area of the Nevada desert used as a bombing range by the US military) Burtynsky produces images whose beauty is freighted with a political and ecological purpose that is unavoidable and unobtrusive. The pictures can never be reduced to a polemical message, and are always compelling - often puzzlingly so - in and of themselves. Some of the quarries, for example, comprise almost abstract blocks of striated marble, floating in a lake of flat, motionless green. Weirdly, the hard, grey-white stones with vertical gouge-scars and veins end up looking like billowing Christo wraps. Even when there are human beings or tools to help us get a fix on things, the scale is hard to comprehend. In some cases, the assault on the landscape is so immense that the idea on which we have long relied to visually orient ourselves - linear perspective - has been abolished. The ecological corollary of this is that we are witnessing something whose consequences are incalculable - if not entirely unprecedented. For it turns out that the template for this outlook was provided by an extraordinary 1932 photograph of a quarry by August Sander - best-known for his portraits - which hurled the viewer into the vertiginous midst of the picture.

Burtynsky's contemporary vision, in other words, is the product of a creative quarrying of the photographic past. Pioneering landscape photographers such as Carleton Watkins, William Henry Jackson (whose works were sponsored by the relentless westward expansion of American railways into the wilderness they depicted) and Charles Sheeler (who was enthralled by the gleaming promise of modern industry) inform Burtynsky's work and, in turn, are respectfully interrogated and reanimated by it. Burtynsky, then, is an original artist in exactly the sense described and prescribed by TS Eliot: part of a tradition that is actively extended and reconfigured by his contribution to it.

The intellectual background to the wealth of photographs showcased in Oil can conveniently be framed by two casual remarks. The first was reported by the cultural theorist Raymond Williams, who recalled a miner "saying to me, of someone we were discussing: 'He's the sort of man who gets up in the morning and presses a switch and expects a light to come on.'" The other occurred during a conversation I had with the woman who looked after an apartment I was renting in New Orleans during the first Gulf War, in 1991. She was against the war on the grounds that it was really about America's incessant need for oil. Then I asked if I might have an extra blanket because, at night, it was a little chilly. "Oh," she replied. 'You should just turn the heating up a bit."

To express it as concisely as possible, the photographs in Oil seek to make visible the invisible connections between these two opposing views of the world, one predicated on scarcity, the other on limitless abundance. Burtynsky offers a vast portfolio of images, from oilfields to refineries, to highways, cities and industries, to recycling and eventual waste. It's an obviously admirable, important and well-intentioned project by a serious and committed artist.

Why, then, does one baulk at it? The problem, partly, is that the titular subject - the raw material, as it were - defines our world to such an extent that it is all-engulfing. Oil is so pervasive that it ends up being an alternative rubric around which to organise a Burtynsky retrospective: the photographic equivalent of an edition of New and Selected Poems in which old favourites (arranged in slightly different permutations) are supplemented by some more recent works. Admittedly, there are no quarries or railcuts, but the Bangladeshi ship-breakers are still toiling away, the tyre piles and densified oil drums are still there. Well, fair enough, nothing wrong with a bit of recycling, but whereas Manufactured Landscapes offered a glimpse of teaming visual possibilities the totalising vision of Oil induces a feeling of satiety. There are new things (new to me, at any rate), some of them very good, especially the Koyaanisqatsi- style views of the spaghetti tangle of freeways, the cityscapes stretching out to infinity, but once the doubts start to seep in - the suspicion that Burtynsky is photographing the crisis of peak oil and climate change like someone fluently producing company reports - they prove dangerously corrosive.

Burtynsky has long had a fondness for photographing endlessly replicated units of the same thing, whether it's workers at identical benches in a factory, tyres or freight containers - anything, really. Individual examples can be stunning but in Oil, we keep getting replicated instances of pretty much the same thing: multiple versions of multiple cars, multiple versions of locust-like oil derricks. We get the point. Then the point is made again with variations so minor that they appear, almost, as an indulgence. Perhaps this is why the viewer is left with an uncomfortable sensation of bloating.

Burtynsky has always avoided wrecking himself on the rocks he photographs, but his enterprise has, nevertheless, contained a lurking potential for self-aggrandisement. In an interview in Manufactured Landscapes he admitted to a compulsion to seek out "the largest example of something - the largest mines, the largest quarry". Attracted to "massive operations", Burtynsky - more exactly, a Burtynsky photograph - is becoming a bit of a production. One gets the sense that this is as close to stadium rock as a landscape photographer is ever likely to get. There is a similar loss of intimacy, the same dependence on scale and spectacle, on the sheer scale of the spectacle. Now, of course, a crane or helicopter might have been indispensable to the creation of some of Burtynsky's photographs but a crane can so easily become a kind of podium.

Oil invites us to gorge ourselves on Burtynsky's epic catalogue, to gulp down image after image as warnings of impending scarcity and looming resource wars. But it's not just the quantity, not just a case of there being too much of a messianically good thing. No, some of the individual images are stunningly bad. One of Burtynsky's strengths has always been his subtle command of colour, whether muted and rusting or molten and blazing. In images of the Truckers Jamboree at Walcott, Iowa, or of the car park at a Kiss concert in Sturgis, North Dakota, however, the blare of colour seems simply vulgar. Granted, these may not be the most refined or understated gatherings on the planet but, like Hamlet in his rants about his mother's infidelity, Burtynsky wallows in and is tainted by what he observes without being able to claim the satirist's exemption of a Martin Parr (he is too high-minded for that). The images of crowds and speedsters at the Bonneville Salt Flats, meanwhile, lack the subtlety and zero-humidity grace of rival photographs by Misrach. They also serve as a reminder that Burtynsky has rarely been at his best with people. Actually, let me pause here to contradict the point I am about to make. One magnificent image shows a gang of ship-breakers in Bangladesh, spread out against a near-monochrome, oil-drenched shoreline, a long chain over their shoulders, trudging from one side of the picture to the next. It's as if John Singer Sargent's painting Gassed - a procession of blinded soldiers, each with his hand on the shoulder of the man in front - has been relocated to a part of the world in which suffering becomes the stoic norm of an average working day (and tacitly retitled Oiled). But the general point still stands: for the most part, people in Burtynsky serve as indicators of the superhuman scale of the work they are engaged in (which becomes, in turn, a testament to the superhuman importance of the work in which they appear!); either that or they're a species of the endlessly replicated units to which he is compulsively attracted.

In China Burtynsky organised a photograph of yellow-jacketed workers arranged in deep perspectival recession along a street lined with yellow factories in Zhangzhou. It was such a striking and successful picture that Burtynsky decided to try something similar with a bunch of bikers in downtown Sturgis. Earlier I made a comparison with stadium rock; with this image Burtynsky has formed his own tribute band. The result seems to me entirely without merit or purpose except insofar as it is yet another gig on the world tour called Oil.

Geoff Dyer is the author of 10 books, including The Ongoing Moment, a history of photography. Edward Burtynsky's Oil (Dh510) is published by Steidl.

COMPANY%20PROFILE
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Mercer, the investment consulting arm of US services company Marsh & McLennan, expects its wealth division to at least double its assets under management (AUM) in the Middle East as wealth in the region continues to grow despite economic headwinds, a company official said.

Mercer Wealth, which globally has $160 billion in AUM, plans to boost its AUM in the region to $2-$3bn in the next 2-3 years from the present $1bn, said Yasir AbuShaban, a Dubai-based principal with Mercer Wealth.

Within the next two to three years, we are looking at reaching $2 to $3 billion as a conservative estimate and we do see an opportunity to do so,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Mercer does not directly make investments, but allocates clients’ money they have discretion to, to professional asset managers. They also provide advice to clients.

“We have buying power. We can negotiate on their (client’s) behalf with asset managers to provide them lower fees than they otherwise would have to get on their own,” he added.

Mercer Wealth’s clients include sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and insurance companies among others.

From its office in Dubai, Mercer also looks after Africa, India and Turkey, where they also see opportunity for growth.

Wealth creation in Middle East and Africa (MEA) grew 8.5 per cent to $8.1 trillion last year from $7.5tn in 2015, higher than last year’s global average of 6 per cent and the second-highest growth in a region after Asia-Pacific which grew 9.9 per cent, according to consultancy Boston Consulting Group (BCG). In the region, where wealth grew just 1.9 per cent in 2015 compared with 2014, a pickup in oil prices has helped in wealth generation.

BCG is forecasting MEA wealth will rise to $12tn by 2021, growing at an annual average of 8 per cent.

Drivers of wealth generation in the region will be split evenly between new wealth creation and growth of performance of existing assets, according to BCG.

Another general trend in the region is clients’ looking for a comprehensive approach to investing, according to Mr AbuShaban.

“Institutional investors or some of the families are seeing a slowdown in the available capital they have to invest and in that sense they are looking at optimizing the way they manage their portfolios and making sure they are not investing haphazardly and different parts of their investment are working together,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Some clients also have a higher appetite for risk, given the low interest-rate environment that does not provide enough yield for some institutional investors. These clients are keen to invest in illiquid assets, such as private equity and infrastructure.

“What we have seen is a desire for higher returns in what has been a low-return environment specifically in various fixed income or bonds,” he said.

“In this environment, we have seen a de facto increase in the risk that clients are taking in things like illiquid investments, private equity investments, infrastructure and private debt, those kind of investments were higher illiquidity results in incrementally higher returns.”

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, one of the largest sovereign wealth funds, said in its 2016 report that has gradually increased its exposure in direct private equity and private credit transactions, mainly in Asian markets and especially in China and India. The authority’s private equity department focused on structured equities owing to “their defensive characteristics.”

The design

The protective shell is covered in solar panels to make use of light and produce energy. This will drastically reduce energy loss.

More than 80 per cent of the energy consumed by the French pavilion will be produced by the sun.

The architecture will control light sources to provide a highly insulated and airtight building.

The forecourt is protected from the sun and the plants will refresh the inner spaces.

A micro water treatment plant will recycle used water to supply the irrigation for the plants and to flush the toilets. This will reduce the pavilion’s need for fresh water by 30 per cent.

Energy-saving equipment will be used for all lighting and projections.

Beyond its use for the expo, the pavilion will be easy to dismantle and reuse the material.

Some elements of the metal frame can be prefabricated in a factory.

 From architects to sound technicians and construction companies, a group of experts from 10 companies have created the pavilion.

Work will begin in May; the first stone will be laid in Dubai in the second quarter of 2019. 

Construction of the pavilion will take 17 months from May 2019 to September 2020.

COMPANY PROFILE

Name: Qyubic
Started: October 2023
Founder: Namrata Raina
Based: Dubai
Sector: E-commerce
Current number of staff: 10
Investment stage: Pre-seed
Initial investment: Undisclosed 

NO OTHER LAND

Director: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal

Stars: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham

Rating: 3.5/5

Specs

Engine: Duel electric motors
Power: 659hp
Torque: 1075Nm
On sale: Available for pre-order now
Price: On request

WISH
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EDirectors%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Chris%20Buck%2C%20Fawn%20Veerasunthorn%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EStars%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Ariana%20DeBose%2C%20Chris%20Pine%2C%20Alan%20Tudyk%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ERating%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%203.5%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Dubai Bling season three

Cast: Loujain Adada, Zeina Khoury, Farhana Bodi, Ebraheem Al Samadi, Mona Kattan, and couples Safa & Fahad Siddiqui and DJ Bliss & Danya Mohammed 

Rating: 1/5

While you're here
COMPANY%20PROFILE
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Specs

Engine: Dual-motor all-wheel-drive electric

Range: Up to 610km

Power: 905hp

Torque: 985Nm

Price: From Dh439,000

Available: Now

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting

2. Prayer

3. Hajj

4. Shahada

5. Zakat 

The National's picks

4.35pm: Tilal Al Khalediah
5.10pm: Continous
5.45pm: Raging Torrent
6.20pm: West Acre
7pm: Flood Zone
7.40pm: Straight No Chaser
8.15pm: Romantic Warrior
8.50pm: Calandogan
9.30pm: Forever Young

Juliet, Naked
Dir: Jesse Peretz
Starring: Chris O'Dowd, Rose Byrne, Ethan Hawke​​​​​​​
​​​​​​​Two stars

Moon Music

Artist: Coldplay

Label: Parlophone/Atlantic

Number of tracks: 10

Rating: 3/5

Election pledges on migration

CDU: "Now is the time to control the German borders and enforce strict border rejections" 

SPD: "Border closures and blanket rejections at internal borders contradict the spirit of a common area of freedom" 

The Energy Research Centre

Founded 50 years ago as a nuclear research institute, scientists at the centre believed nuclear would be the “solution for everything”.
Although they still do, they discovered in 1955 that the Netherlands had a lot of natural gas. “We still had the idea that, by 2000, it would all be nuclear,” said Harm Jeeninga, director of business and programme development at the centre.
"In the 1990s, we found out about global warming so we focused on energy savings and tackling the greenhouse gas effect.”
The energy centre’s research focuses on biomass, energy efficiency, the environment, wind and solar, as well as energy engineering and socio-economic research.

The stats

Ship name: MSC Bellissima

Ship class: Meraviglia Class

Delivery date: February 27, 2019

Gross tonnage: 171,598 GT

Passenger capacity: 5,686

Crew members: 1,536

Number of cabins: 2,217

Length: 315.3 metres

Maximum speed: 22.7 knots (42kph)

THE%20SPECS
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What is an FTO Designation?

FTO designations impose immigration restrictions on members of the organisation simply by virtue of their membership and triggers a criminal prohibition on knowingly providing material support or resources to the designated organisation as well as asset freezes. 

It is a crime for a person in the United States or subject to the jurisdiction of the United States to knowingly provide “material support or resources” to or receive military-type training from or on behalf of a designated FTO.

Representatives and members of a designated FTO, if they are aliens, are inadmissible to and, in certain circumstances removable from, the United States.

Except as authorised by the Secretary of the Treasury, any US financial institution that becomes aware that it has possession of or control over funds in which an FTO or its agent has an interest must retain possession of or control over the funds and report the funds to the Treasury Department.

Source: US Department of State

'Panga'

Directed by Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari

Starring Kangana Ranaut, Richa Chadha, Jassie Gill, Yagya Bhasin, Neena Gupta

Rating: 3.5/5

The specs: 2018 Mercedes-Benz E 300 Cabriolet

Price, base / as tested: Dh275,250 / Dh328,465

Engine: 2.0-litre four-cylinder

Power: 245hp @ 5,500rpm

Torque: 370Nm @ 1,300rpm

Transmission: Nine-speed automatic

Fuel consumption, combined: 7.0L / 100km

Ms Yang's top tips for parents new to the UAE
  1. Join parent networks
  2. Look beyond school fees
  3. Keep an open mind
Where to buy

Limited-edition art prints of The Sofa Series: Sultani can be acquired from Reem El Mutwalli at www.reemelmutwalli.com

How to watch Ireland v Pakistan in UAE

When: The one-off Test starts on Friday, May 11
What time: Each day’s play is scheduled to start at 2pm UAE time.
TV: The match will be broadcast on OSN Sports Cricket HD. Subscribers to the channel can also stream the action live on OSN Play.