Edward Burtynsky s remarkable photographic depictions of large-scale industrial landscapes are included in the collections of over 60 major museums including the National Gallery of Canada, the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum in New York and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Burtynsky s distinctions include the TED Prize, the Outreach Award at the Rencontres d Arles and the Roloff Beny Book Award. He sits on the board of directors for the Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival and the Ryerson Gallery and Research Center, and is co-founder of the Scotiabank Photography Award. In 2006 Burtynsky was made Officer of the Order of Canada and in 2016 he received the Governor General s Award in Visual and Media Arts. Burtynsky holds seven honorary doctoral degrees. His books with Steidl are China (2005), Quarries (2007), Oil (2009), Water (2013) and Salt Pans (2016).
Jennifer Baichwal has directed and produced documentaries for over 20 years. Her distinctions include Al Gore s Reel Current Award and Best Canadian Feature Film at the Toronto International Film Festival 2006 for Manufactured Landscapes, about the work of Edward Burtynsky in China; and the 2014 Toronto Film Critic s Association prize for Best Canadian Film and Canadian Media Awards prize for Best Documentary for Watermark. Anthropocene is her tenth feature documentary.
Nicholas de Pencier is a documentary director, producer and director of photography. His credits include Let It Come Down: The Life of Paul Bowles (International Emmy), The Holier It Gets, (Best Canadian Doc, Hot Docs), The True Meaning of Pictures (Gemini, Best Arts), Hockey Nomad (Gemini, Best Sports) and Manufactured Landscapes, (TIFF Best Canadian Feature; Genie, Best Doc). De Pencier was also director, producer and director of photography of Watermark and Black Code. He photographed and co-directed with Baichwal Long Time Running about the Tragically Hip s historic Man Machine Poem tour.