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by Susan Kandel
Los
Angeles Times, May 29, 1995
It's easy to understand why photographer 'Mark
Citret isn't very well known. It isn't because his work isn't
interesting—it is, as this survey at Paul Kopeikin Gallery
will attest It's because the work is unassuming—which is not
to say that is slight, because it isn't.
Citret is attuned to all sorts of things: light
streaming across snow-capped landscapes (this is surely owed
to his years working with Ansel Adams); things that resemble
other things (an iceberg that doubles as a Sphinx); the detail
that gives away the pretense (a seascape marred by a piece
of white paper, as hallucinatory as a stray marshmallow);
the fantastic fictions inspired by factual representations
(a cache of abandoned bathtubs arranged like ancient sarcophagi
or sleeping cows).
Everything about these images eschews the spectacular—the
light is dim, the graphic contrasts are muted the surreal
forms are hidden behind the scrim of the everyday. In the
hands of someone else, these little epiphanies might be trumpeted
as artistic triumphs. Here, they read as observations that
are no less striking for their diffidence.
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