The Disappearance of Darkness

PHOTOGRAPHY AT THE END OF THE ANALOG ERA

The Nation, Shelf Life
… part eulogy, Disappearance of Darkness is more autopsy than obituary. [It is] an impressionistic investigation of the film industry- the local economy it once sustained, the many thousands of people it employed, the process by which its increasingly scarce products are manufactured.

Lucy McKeon, The Nation

Over the past decade, photographer Robert Burley has traveled the world documenting the abandonment and destruction of film-based photography, namely, the factories where film was produced and the labs that developed it. Burley’s atmospheric large-format photographs transport viewers to rarely seen sites where the alchemy of the photographic process was practiced over the last century-from the Polaroid plant in Waltham, Massachusetts to the Kodak-Pathé plant in Chalon-sur-Saône, France, the birthplace in 1827 of photography itself. As both fine art and documentary, The Disappearance of Darkness is an elegiac reflection on the resilience of traditional art forms in the digital era and a vital commemoration of a century-old industry that seems to have disappeared overnight.

Princeton Architectural Press in association with the Ryerson Image Centre. 2012
Foreward by Doina Popescu and Gaelle Morel

Essays by
Robert Burley
Alison Nordstrom, George Eastman Museum
Francois Cheval, Musée Nicéphore Niépce
Andrea Kunard, National Gallery of Canada