A Prairie Town

A Prairie Town

1070 Homer Street Vancouver, BC V6B 2W9, Canada Saturday, March 13, 2021–Sunday, April 4, 2021


weathered elevator, saskatchewan, ca by david burdeny

David Burdeny

Weathered Elevator, Saskatchewan, CA, 2020

3,300 CAD

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David Burdeny

Weathered Church, Saskatchewan, CA, 2020

Price on Request

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David Burdeny

Tomorrow's Harvest, Saskatchewan, CA

8,000 CAD

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David Burdeny

Snowbound, Saskatchewan, CA

3,300 CAD

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David Burdeny

Red Hotel, Saskatchewan, CA

3,300 CAD

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David Burdeny

Railway and Main, Saskatchewan, CA, 2020

Price on Request

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David Burdeny

Prairie Road, Saskatchewan, CA, 2020

3,300 CAD

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David Burdeny

One Room Schoolhouse, Saskatchewan, CA, 2020

Price on Request

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David Burdeny

Lepine Elevators , Saskatchewan, CA, 2020

3,300 CAD

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David Burdeny

Harper’s Hardware, Saskatchewan, CA, 2020

6,600 CAD

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David Burdeny

Guys Lunch and Grocery, Saskatchewan, CA, 2020

6,600 CAD

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David Burdeny

Group of Five, Saskatchewan, CA, 2020

Price on Request

Vancouver-based photography artist, David Burdeny, has photographed an immense collection of architecture and landscapes across the globe, including Europe, Asia, Russia, Antarctica, Greenland, Brazil, Japan, and Cuba. Ironically, he has never created a Canadian series. Due to travel restrictions of the current pandemic, Burdeny felt like a return to the prairie roots of his upbringing. This landscape of big sky and wide-open spaces influenced Burdeny's continuous use of the horizon line to set his compositions. Coupled with his love of architecture (a former architect himself) and the minimalism created by the flat light and snow-covered ground, Burdeny tells a visual tale of nostalgia using the poetic beauty of snow.