Robert Burley (born March 18, 1957) is a Canadian photographer of architecture and the urban landscape.[1] He is based in Toronto, Canada, and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.[2]
Life and work
Robert Burley grew up in rural Ontario in the town of Picton. He studied Media Studies at Ryerson Polytechnical Institute (now Toronto Metropolitan University), Toronto (BAA 1980) and later pursued graduate studies in photography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (MFA 1986). While living in Chicago, Burley trained briefly with Hedrich-Blessing Photographers before returning to Toronto to establish Design Archive, a firm specializing in architectural photography.[3] From 1997 to 2021 Burley was a professor at Ryerson University's School of Image Arts where he helped create new programs and resources related to photography. These include his contributions to the creation of Ryerson Library's Special Collections,[4] the acquisition of the Black Star (photo agency) Collection,[5] and his position as one of the founding Program Directors of the graduate program in Film + Photographic Preservation.[6] Throughout his career, Burley has executed numerous commissioned and self-directed multi-year projects realized as books and exhibitions. These include:
O’Hare: Airfield on the Prairie (Chicago History Museum 1989)
Viewing Olmsted: Photographs by Robert Burley, Lee Friedlander and Geoffrey James (Canadian Centre for Architecture 1997) ISBN0262621169
The Disappearance of Darkness: Photography at the end of the analog era (Princeton Architectural Press 2014) ISBN9781616890957
An Enduring Wilderness: Toronto’s Natural Parklands (ECW Press 2017) ISBN9781770413795
An Accidental Wilderness: The Origins and Ecology of Toronto’s Tommy Thompson Park (University of Toronto Press 2020) ISBN9781487508340