|
                          
|
 |
| |
Bio:
Mark Citret was born in 1949 in Buffalo, New York, and grew up
in San Francisco. He bagan photographing seriously in 1968, and
received both his BA and MA in Art from San Francisco State University.
Most of Citret's work is not specific to any locale or subject
matter. Still, he has worked on many photographic projects over
the course of his career, and continues to do so. From 1973 to
1975 he lived in and photographed Halcott Center, a farming valley
in New York's Catskill Mountains. In the mid to late 1980s he
produced a large body of work with the working title of "Unnatural
Wonders", which is his personal survey of architecture in
the national parks.
|
|
       
 |
He
spent four years, 1990 to 1993, photographing "Coastside
Plant", a massive construction site in the southwest corner
of San Francisco. Since
he moved to his current home in 1986, he has been photographing
the ever changing play of ocean and sky from the cliff behind
his house. Currently he is in the midst of a multi-year commission
from the University of California San Francisco, photographing
the construction of their 43 acre Mission Bay life-sciences campus.
He
has taught photography at the University of California Berkeley
Extension since 1982 and the University of California Santa Cruz
Extension since 1988, and for organizations such as the Center
for Photography at Woodstock, the Ansel Adams Gallery, and Santa
Fe Workshops. His work is represented by prominant photography
galleries in the United States, and is in many museum, corporate,
and private collectins, including the San Francisco Museum of
Modern Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the New Orleans
Museum of Art, the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, the University
of Arizona's Center for Creative Photography, and the Monterey
Museum of Art. A monograph of his photographs, Along the Way,
was published by Custom & Limited Editions, San Francisco,
in 1999.
He lives in Daly City, California, with his wife Diana, and twin
teenage sons, Cole and Toby.
|
 |
|