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First Posted: 12/12/2012

D. B. Stovall, a Washington, D.C. area native, bought his first camera at age 10: a Rosko purchased for 88 cents at Murphy’s Five and Dime. Quickly moving on to various Instamatics, an old Leica D, and finally Japanese 35mm SLRs, Stovall explored different aspects of black and white photography, becoming adept at all kinds of darkroom work by the time he entered high school. He was introduced to the view camera at the Rochester Institute of Technology in the early 1970s and eventually moved on to large format color transparency in a realism-based vision, which he still practices today.

Camerawork Gallery, located downstairs in the Marquis Gallery, 515 Center St, Scranton, will host an exhibit of recent work by Stovall, Photographs of the American Vernacular, Dec. 7, through Jan. 29, 2013. An opening reception, free to the public, will be held Dec. 7 from 6 to 8:20 p.m.

Stovall started entering juried exhibitions at the beginning of 2008 and since then has been in almost 100 juried group and solo shows. The jurors that have selected his work are curators and art professionals from institutions such as the Guggenheim Museum, Corcoran Museum of Art, NY Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco MOMA, Philadelphia Museum of Art, and many other prestigious venues.

Although I call my work ‘American Vernacular,’ he said in an artist statement, it is important that it be understood what it is and what it isn’t. Although some have termed it ‘old buildings,’ that is selling it far too short. I do tend to look for older buildings, but that is more due to the fact that older structures, like whiskey or cognac aging in a barrel, acquire a certain color and flavor after many years. This is enhanced by the various hands that have put their own touches onto the structure, kind of like an artist on a canvas over a long period.

I try to capture that sense, he continued, as well as highlight the kind of things that others tend to overlook. The view camera is a perfect tool for this work. It enforces a kind of discipline on my vision, what I call a ‘slower way of seeing’ that highlights the kind of sharp detail that would otherwise be lost in the camouflage of the everyday. What it is definitely not is nostalgia or ‘Americana.’ I leave that type of work to those who are better at it than I.