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by Garrett Holg
ARTnews,
October, 2001
Mark Citret at Chicago's Catherine Edelman
Gallery
San Francisco photographer Mark Citret focuses
on the ordinary and the overlooked in daily life, like a play
ground slide, a warehouse ladder, or a motel tub and shower.
But his extraordinarily nuanced black-and-hite images are
anything but mundane. Landscapes are mood-filled, often hazy
odes to the tradition of late-19th- and early-20th- pictorial
photography. Interiors, with their subdued geometric forms,
take on a more formal and abstract quality.
The majority of gelatin silver prints in this
show spanning three decades of work—most images dated from
the 1990s and later—demonstrated Citret's knack for depicting
light. His is not a hard, cold kind of light that cuts sharply
defined edges but a misty, radiant one that envelops and softens
forms.
Citret frequently treats this light, whose sources
are often beyond the camera's view, as something mystical
or religious. In Open Door (1993), for instance, light
spills from a doorway opening onto a long, empty corridor,
lending an otherworldly aura to a commonplace scene. In Roadside
Rest, Southern Idaho (1992), a lone picnic table centered
at the end of a cross-shape cement walkway suggests an altar
of sorts. Seen against a dramatically darkening sky, the landscape
has a portentous and almost biblical effect. Citret creates
a preternatural stillness and dreamlike quiet that encourages
reflection.
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