On View
See the Glory of the Olympics Captured in David Burnett’s Photos
He's been shooting the Games since 1984.
He's been shooting the Games since 1984.
Sarah Cascone ShareShare This Article
Olympic athletes, with their incredible feats of strength, speed, and general physiques, are captivating in action. Photographer David Burnett, whose work is the subject of “Man Without Gravity,” an exhibition at New York’s Anastasia Photo, has been charged with capturing that magic at every summer games since 1984.
It was at those games, in Los Angeles, that Burnett began to focus on athletes in motion. Rather than waiting with the other photographers at the finish line of the women’s 3,000-meter race, Burnett found a seat along the track. There, he was uniquely-positioned to capture the dramatic fall of American track star Mary Decker in her showdown with the UK’s Zola Budd, who ran barefoot.
“It’s about being lucky and not screwing up, and trying to be ready for some moment if you happen to be the right place,” Burnett told the New York Times in 2012.
Since taking those career-making images, Burnett has become a fixture at the games, from the Winter Games in 2002, in Salt Lake City, and again in 2014, in Sochi, Russia.
His images are taken from the vantage point of the crowd, as if he were just another fan enjoying the competition. “I have the luxury of never having been the photographer who was relied upon to get the winner in that victorious pose,” Burnett explained in a statement, noting that like much of the audience, he rarely sees these sports outside of an Olympic year.
“My mission, I feel, is to study the sport, the motion, the players and to get pictures that spectators may never witness by simply sitting there observing the games,” Burnett added.
See more photos from the exhibition below.
“David Burnett: Man Without Gravity” is on view at Anastasia Photo, 143 Ludlow Street, New York, June 7–September 25, 2016.