It鈥檚 early November, and head-high surf pounds the Pismo Beach Pier, on California鈥檚 central coast. But has solid footing on the railing. Without hesitation he bends his knees, pivots 180 degrees, and backflips into the great Pacific washing machine. I lose sight of him for what feels like a minute before he appears in the whitewash. Another monster wave rumbles in. Burkard catches it and bodysurfs to shore.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 not warm,鈥 he yells, shaking out his wet hair like a dog. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 drink coffee. I have a hard time focusing, but all I need to do is jump in the ocean.鈥
鈥淣ot warm鈥 is hard to believe coming from someone who treads water next to icebergs. When the 32-year-old photographer isn鈥檛 working in eastern Greenland or Alaska, he鈥檚 here, dropping his core temperature at the beach where he grew up and his career began 13 years ago. With around 100 magazine covers to his credit鈥攑lus sponsors like Black Dia颅mond and Sony, prestigious awards, a TED Talk that鈥檚 been viewed almost two million times, a catalog of films and books, and three million Instagram followers鈥擝urkard could go freeze anywhere he likes. Yet, with his wife, Breanne, and two sons (Jeremiah, six, and Forrest, four), as well as a studio just down Highway 101, he鈥檇 like to spend more than about three months a year at home. 鈥淭his is one of California鈥檚 last funky beach towns,鈥 Burkard says of Pismo, peering through bloodshot blue eyes at tourist shops and caf茅s. 鈥淲hen I was a teenager, I turned to photography as a way to get out of here. Now there鈥檚 nowhere else I鈥檇 rather be.鈥
A Road Few Travel
Watch “Passion,” an episode about Burkard in 国产吃瓜黑料 TV's series A Road Few Travel, on July 2We jump into his well-worn Transit Connect camper, and I spot his passport resting below the stereo. He used it 48 hours prior to get home from his 27th trip to Iceland, where he was hired to explore the West颅fjords with surfer Stephanie Gilmore and the band MGMT. 鈥淗ave you posted a 鈥檊ram yet today?鈥 I joke, to which Burkard throws his head back, resigned to the fact that he might be labeled an Instagram influencer for eternity. His posts often get more than 100,000 likes and hundreds of comments. 鈥淚 want to shoot photographs that will be here a lot longer than I am,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut my goal has always been to reach as many people as I can, so I鈥檓 really grateful that Instagram has taken my career and given it a megaphone.鈥

Kingdom of Ice
In praise of wild and frigid places
For this photo, Burkard convinced his friend, big-wave surfer Keith Malloy, to hop on a last-minute flight with him and go hunt swells on the south coast of Iceland. Midtrip, though, they reached the glacial lagoon J枚kuls谩rl贸n and spent an hour paddling around icebergs.
We pull into Chris Burkard Studio, a renovated warehouse tucked behind the Pismo Beach Outlets, which he opened in July 2016. His images cover the walls. You know one when you see it: a surreally beautiful landscape is almost always the main character. 鈥淗e鈥檚 really good at placing small humans in big spaces,鈥 says Surfer magazine photo editor Grant Ellis, who has worked with Burkard for 12 years. 鈥淗e has a distinctive style of showing the beauty of a place through color and stillness. He steps back and lets the scene be.鈥
It wasn鈥檛 until Burkard, at 19, borrowed a film camera from Breanne鈥檚 mother that he dis颅covered the power of photography. He eventually purchased a digital Canon 20D and a waterproof housing, and taught himself how to artfully combine energetic ocean颅scapes with surfers. In 2006, he landed an internship at Trans颅World Surf, the same year he was awarded a $5,000 grant from the Follow the Light Foundation, launched by the family and colleagues of former Surfing photo editor Larry Moore. Burkard used the money to fund a two-month road trip from Oregon to Mexico with his friend Eric Soderquist, resulting in a photo book called . By 2009, Burkard was spearheading feature expeditions for Surfer, where he鈥檚 still on the masthead as a senior photographer.
鈥淎ll I really care about is shooting photos that make people want to be there and inspire action in some way, getting away from their desk or from school to see what the world has to offer,鈥 Burkard says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what images did for me as a kid.鈥
Burkard was ahead of the class when it came to embracing digital photography. And when most surf photographers were jostling for position in Hawaii or Tahiti, he was scouring satellite swell maps of Kamchatka, Russia; Unstad, Norway; and Alaska鈥檚 Aleutian Islands. He assembled teams of assistants and athletes and joined Instagram early on to share behind-the-scenes footage and personal stories of what it took to get to those places. Grad颅ually, his audience and client list grew.

On Burkard鈥檚 first winter trip to Iceland, in 2012, he and some friends set out before dawn, hiked up a glacier, descended fixed ropes, and took a dinghy across a tiny river to get to this cavern by sunrise.
鈥淲hat separates Chris is his work ethic,鈥 says climber and photographer Jimmy Chin. 鈥淗e has built an incredible presence on Instagram, but it didn鈥檛 come easy. He has consistently put out great work, beautiful work, unexpected work, for years. People love his vision, but they also love his voice, which comes out in his captions.鈥
Today, Burkard focuses on personal projects, commercial jobs for clients like Apple, the North Face, and Toyota, and photography workshops, which this year include a six-day course in Colorado and a sailing trip around northwest Norway. He provides students with a blend of theory, technique, and social-media tips. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 really know how to get millions of followers,鈥 Burkard says. 鈥淚f there鈥檚 one thing I have noticed, it鈥檚 that the more I鈥檝e been able to be honest and open up and share the actual things that make me tick in captions, people seem to care about that.鈥 He also tries to post consistently, once or twice a day, and encourages students to draft a mission statement. His most emphatic advice: don鈥檛 tell viewers what they can already see. 鈥淭he worst thing you can do as a photographer is pair a beautiful piece of work with a crappy, regurgitated caption. If I read 鈥楾he mountains are calling and I must go鈥 one more time,鈥 he laughs. 鈥淪ocial media is the place where you make your own quotes.鈥
Burkard鈥檚 captions range from honoring nature (鈥淭here are few places where you can feel precipitation rising upward. This is one of them,鈥 about an image in Kauai), to photography advice (鈥淎 good leading line not only pulls the viewer in but also helps them to focus on what is important in the frame鈥), to personal disclosure (鈥淎 sad but real by-product of Social Media is that it can create an ever present need for recognition. It has become more and more obvious to me how important it is to be in environments that humble you, scare you, and ultimately challenge who you are鈥).

After paddling seven miles with a friend on Maligne Lake, in Canada鈥檚 Jasper National Park, Burkard shot this photo of Spirit Island at sunset before camping out in the cold.
Burkard鈥檚 work has always steered toward environmental advocacy. Recently he teamed up with the National Park Foundation to raise the profile of lesser known natural playgrounds, like Colorado鈥檚 Great Sand Dunes and Arizona鈥檚 Canyon de Chelly; he鈥檚 also working on a book of aerial photography of the glacial rivers in Iceland鈥檚 central highlands. (Some of the proceeds will go toward a campaign to designate the threatened area as a national park.) Then there鈥檚 his growing interest in directing films, including last year鈥檚 Tribeca selection , about a quest to surf under the northern lights in Iceland.
How Burkard accomplishes all this is hard to fathom. Longtime colleague and Under an Arctic Sky cinematographer Ben Weiland says he has an uncanny ability to focus during high-pressure situations, like the 11-hour drive the crew took during one of Iceland鈥檚 worst snowstorms in 25 years. When their truck got stuck in a snowdrift on the edge of a sea cliff, Burkard jumped into the blizzard to guide the group out. 鈥淗e thrives in situations like that,鈥 Weiland says. 鈥淗e never stops.鈥