Mark Citret
Photographs
About Mark
Reviews & Articles
Essays
Books
Gallery Representation
Workshops & Events
Contact

by Rick Deragon

Coast Weekly Monterey County, June 20, 2002

 

Bold youth meets refined middle age in an exhibit of two Bay Area artists.

 

You won't find shock-value expressionism here. Citret and Horm work on the premise that the world is hauntingly beautiful, in spite of what we might do to it.

 

The history of art overflows with stories of artists evolving through phases. We see the early work, fresh from the cocoon of training, emerging like a chrysalis spreading its newfound wings. Then the mature work appears, marked by signs of mastery of material and the heart. Finally, the late period shows the world a transcendent vision, or, sadly, paraphrase and degeneration. A dual exhibition featuring photographs by Mark Citret and Rolfe Horn at the Weston Gallery in Carmel affords the opportunity of seeing two photographers at different stages of development. In one there is youthful enthusiasm, a vital freshness; in the other, a veteran's seasoned self-confidence as he imposes his vision on his chosen world of subject matter.

 

Citret and Horn, two San Francisco Bay Area-based photographers, have both mastered the medium in contrasting and fascinating ways. Citret, born in 1949, has discovered a process that gives him a final pale image infused with soft sepia tones. Horn, born in 1971, utilizes long exposures that "burn" evocative blacks and grays into sky, cloud, tree, rock, water and arcing freeway. Citret reveals his interpretation of reality as an understated veil; Horn enthusiastically declares his sense of wonder.

 

Photographers frequently work in series, mining a type of subject for its expressive possibilities. Both photographers here have favored subjects with roots in the West Coast tradition of straight photography. The land and human's relationship to it reign supreme. Regardless of their darkroom manipulations, which are strongly apparent, there is consummate respect for traditional composition, clarity and the unspoken contract between viewer and picture-maker. You won't find shock-value expressionism here, no Joel Peter-Witkin gross-outs, no Nan Goldin junkies. Citret and Horn work on the premise that the world is hauntingly beautiful, in spite of what we might do to it.

 

Early in his career, Citret moved from a poetic, though conventional, interpretation of landscape in the early 1970s to the more complex themes of human manipulation of nature and humanity's place in that landscape. His recent work presents, in diaphanous sepia tones, construction sites or manmade structures depicted not as the dreck of an industrial world but as locations of geometric harmony that will be subsumed eventually by geological and chronological forces.

 

Citret's "Tupman Canal, 1994," for instance, features a broad view down a canal with a graceful parabolic curve marking where water meets the concrete embankment. A line of trees is barely discernible along the horizon. Reflected in the expanse of water are cirrus clouds, their gauzy threads stretching below a dense sky. Peace permeates the scene. In his interpretation, men have not cut into the earth or masterminded natural run-off patterns. Rather, as concrete and cloud, water and tree consist of the same pale sepia substance, the elegant composition suggests a moment in the great continuum when human handiwork resembles that of nature. But this moment is transitory; the concrete embankment, like the walls of all fortresses, will be breached--by water, weather and those same gauzy strands that represent erosion and forces we can only imagine.

 

In Citret's other images, a human presence is always seen or felt. Look at "Poplars, Po River Valley, 1998," and what seems a forest enveloped in mystical light is revealed as a groomed stand of trees, row after straight row of planted growth. He depicts doorways, corridors, staircases, ladders, steel columns suspended in the feathery light achieved with what he calls his "vellum" prints—a special photographic paper developed in a secret potion of chemicals that emphasizes the insubstantiality of forms. Coupled with his strong compositional sense, this paradox of balanced arrangement and the ephemeral creates, in image after image, meditations on time.

 

Horn's photographs show a heavier but no less evocative hand. His means are the black and white extremes of the medium, as well as the magic that occurs with extended exposure times and taking photographs at night. If Citret imposes his philosophy and sensibility on his subject matter, Horn travels around looking and responding with the exuberance of a seeker. Whether it's the Oakland Hills, Eureka, Yosemite, Lake Tahoe, Oregon, New Jersey or Thailand, his pictures are imbued with the joy of seeing mysterious truths in man-made and natural subjects.

 

...

 

Citret and Horn, two photographers at different stages of their careers, have created personal and refined bodies of work that are grounded in tradition and reveal the expressive, even philosophical, potential that remains within the conventions of straight photography.