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Not
a Good Sign
Don House
In Not
a Good Sign, Don House takes us on a photographic romp
through the back roads of his life. Instead of the powerful
portraiture and landscape work for which he is best known,
in this eclectic mix of mistakes, misspellings, and misplacements,
he sets aside his slow, methodical largeformat ways and shoots
from the proverbial hip for the pure pleasure of it—over
fifty black-and-white postcards
from the road.
House
sees signs, and especially those that speak louder than intended,
as a form of communication with the locals, a little window
on the community as he passes through. Shunning the interstates
gives House the opportunity to cruise the back roads as part
of his normal work-a-day routine. Mostly shot in the South
andMidwest, it becomes, for us, an album of a region, in concentric
circles around his beloved Arkansas home. Never mocking, only
smiling, he calls his back roads choice an expression of love,
really, and we, the readers, get a little glimpse of that
love affair—from duck pluckers to
fat hogs—we’re riding shotgun, windows
down, hair blowing, camera ready, always ready.
When photographer
Don House is
not out roaming the back roads, you will find him working
in his studio and darkroom, in an isolated corner of northwest
Arkansas, not far from Fayetteville. His images are found
in publications as diverse as the Wall Street Journal
and Backpacker Magazine, and have been featured in
numerous solo and group exhibitions around the country. A
collection of his landscape work was published in Buffalo
Creek Chronicles: Diary of a Cattle Ranch on the Southern
Plains—a collaboration with writer Gary Lantz
and rancher Sue Selman.
January
ISBN 13: 978-0-9824295-0-1
$29.95 paper
8 1/2 x 8 1/2, 58 photographs
Distributed
for Phoenix International.
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