terriloui

Terri Long – Telling lost stories with found objects.

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Terri and the Teeny Tinies

Opening Reception, TTT8, September 5, 2025

Happy to reflect upon participating in three of the annual fundraising Teeny Tiny Trifecta shows at Second Street Gallery in Charlottesville, VA.

What makes a Teeny Tiny Trifecta?
One part alliteration, one part one artist, one part (well, three parts) small art. And weeks of behind the scenes machinations and mystery by staff.

Magnolia series, TTT6, 2023

Smaller works, some quite diminutive in early years, and three in number, from each participating artist. Started eight years ago, w/ 70+ artists, all works 10″ or smaller, filling two walls in the smaller Dove gallery within Second Street.

2025, the 8th year, largest gathering yet, with all works uniformly 8″ square or round, filling three full walls in main gallery, w/ over 600 works. Amazing to behold, kudos to Executive Director and Curator Kristen Chiacchia and staff.

Opening Reception, TTT8, September 5, 2025

My first visit to the Second Street Gallery was decades ago. It held space within the McGuffey Art Center, main floor with tall, lofty old windows. Literally old school, as the McGuffey building transitioned from being an elementary school in 1975. Leah Stoddard was the first curator, director I remember meeting. She was key in celebrating Second Street’s 30 year anniversary and the transition to a new, larger space in a brand new building nearby on Water Street.

My first time with art on Second Street walls? I actually can’t remember all the specifics. Save for two photos, showing me, and my Cerulean Book Quilt on the walls of the Dove Gallery, some group show (silent auction?) in 2008. Grateful for the digital archive, when memory fails.

Grateful to these women, moments before the gallery filled up, they unknowingly gifted me a glimpse of their quiet moment, stooping to read, see, view my three TTT8 works. By the time the show concluded, there were a trio of red dots shadowing my works. Fundraiser funds were raised. Teeny tiny fun was had.

new art. in Scottsville. [visual artist with writer’s block]

I’m not a writer. I do write, but no one else has to read my sporadic journal entries. I’ve created new art that needed titles. And this post needs verbiage and a succinct title, preferably referencing my visual art below. But I got nothing.

I’ve had difficulty naming the new art, had internal resistance to doing promotion, as I’ve felt tongue-tied and a-stammering.

Yet I persist. I like my art. I do actually want to get images out there, giving details on my current gallery show, and beckoning people to come to the gallery. Thus, here are place-holder words and titles, until my writing mojo returns.

“Everyone is clever nowadays.” And everyone can get tongue-tied. So be it.

This solo gallery show in the Town of Scottsville came together in a couple of very short weeks. And with several works nearly completed, I chose to concentrate on finishing and framing over promotion.

The fine folks at SCAN and Gallery on Valley hosted an opening reception. It went really well. I made my way through the artist talk, took some goofy pix with friends and PHEW, that initial thrust was over.

This show continues ’til Sept. 7th, stop by some time, please and thank you!
I will be gallery sitting on Sat Aug. 23rd from 10am – 4pm and on Sun. Sept. 7th from 12 – 4pm.

Gallery At Valley SCAN / Scottsville Center for Arts and Nature
460 Valley Street, Scottsville, VA 24590
Gallery Hours:  Thursday, Friday and Sunday 12 – 4pm and Saturday 10am – 4pm 
And by Appointment: getcurious@svilleartsandnature.org

Coming in clear, good reception

January weather conceded a little for our 5 to 7pm Opening Reception for Cut Up and Put Together, Jan 12th at Staunton Augusta Art Center. 

No snow or ice, temps well above freezing, but plenty of rain. And the Staunton & Valley folks were not deterred. They showed up strong, engaged, smiling and ready to see new art. Speaking for myself, but perhaps the 4 other artists too, I’m beholden to all for the community support. Gush. It was really great. Really.

After the reception, the umbrellas were back out, we enjoyed a great dinner with Charlottesville friends and DC family. Barry and I came back to gallery on Saturday to catch some images in the natural light.

Images of my collage, assemblage, sculptural works at SAAC gallery can be viewed here, Cut Up and Put Together.

And then there were Circles

As 2019 was ending, I worked at a hydroponic greenhouse. I noticed several boxes of these cardboard discs, that arrived in some shipment as packing filler. I diverted some discs from recycling and hefted them to our empty, new old home.

Use what you got, right?! When materials were scarce during the quiet, at-home times of 2020, I realized that what I had in abundance, were circles. Little brown cardboard discs, in a huge plastic bag, in a closet, awaiting a purpose.

By now, I had acquired replacement scissors and piles of colorful printed catalogs arriving by snail mail.

And so I started again, playing, making art, playing mostly. I traced the cardboard discs, cutting up everything of interest I could find. I positioned myself in a comfy chair by the window, sorted the stacks on my new lap desk. I traced and cut, traced and cut with an antique metal Holly Hobby trashcan filling at my feet.

In 2022, I counted over 6100 circles that I had traced and cut, now sorted into old blueberry, pumpkin seed or microgreens style plastic containers. By 2023, I had probably cut about 3500 more.

In 2022 and 2023, a few circles made it onto collages shown and sold at the vast and varied Teeny Tiny Trifecta group shows at Second Street Gallery in Charlottesville.

In early January 2024, 3 days ago, I delivered plenty of multi-circle collages, rustic assemblages and sculptures for the just-about-to-open show at Staunton Augusta Art Center. Come see Cut Up and Put Together, January 12 – February 17, 2024.

Fabrications 2006 – 2016

I found a cache of my older art images and seeing them again is like seeing a lost but not forgotten friend.

I’ll never be reunited with the art lost to our Dec. 2018 house fire, but these digital versions are bringing all the best parts back to me – like a big old, grinning bear hug with my BFF.

My Fabrications came about in 2005 after saying YES YES YES to hand-me-down bags of old family linens. I was inspired by handling the doilies, placemats, linen napkins and tablecloths. Most were used, some worn or torn, all having concluded the domestic, formal era. I saw these linens as material ripe for repurposing – viable with integrity, great appeal and creative value.

I never quite learned to sew in my early years. I dabbled but mostly watched my Mom work her mending magic by hand or at her Singer sewing machine.

My artistic approach to working with these fabrics as an adult, was to disassemble then cobble together, randomly mix-and-match, in an outsider, Great Auntie-shocking, reimagined way – with a nod to my grandparents domesticity and a middle finger to cultural affluenza.

I showed the Fabrications at the Arts Center in Orange, April 2006. I hung 18 pieces in the show, sold 4, and taught a shadow-box collage workshop with 10 like-minded, collector attendees.

I showed the Fabrications closer to home in September 2016 in a little shop on Valley Street in Town of Scottsville.

A hole is to fill.

Old fence post

Several big life changes began in late Fall 2018, hence the 3 year absence of any postings on art, the studio, creative adventures.

I have space and interest to begin again. Like many in the fog and seclusion of pandemic 2020, I went outside for relief and inspiration. Phrases from an old children’s book came to mind, “…a hole is to dig… maybe you could hide things in a hole.” I saw holes in the yard, on my walks, I photographed them and decided to selectively fill them.

Outside, I saw plenty of colorful natural materials to work with growing in the yard or falling from the trees — buttercups, violets, black walnuts and holly berries.

Gaping maw, the work of beavers at Walnut Creek Park
A Hole is to Dig, A First Book of First Definitions by Ruth Krauss, pictures by Maurice Sendak 1952

I decided to buy myself a good condition, used hard back copy of A Hole is to Dig, A First Book of First Definitions, written by Ruth Krauss, illustrations by Maurice Sendak in 1952.

The first time I encountered this book was long after the household interest in reading it had waned. The girls were still young, sharing a bedroom, with matching antique twin beds, but they’d moved on to listening to us read the Narnia or Hogwarts stories aloud before bed time. In 1999, as a new step mom, I would help tidy up and arrange their bookcases, packed with board books and large picture books that they used to read. Sometimes, I’d pause and read. All good titles, many classics, many Maurice Sendak books like this one, all well-read and residing in the house before I’d moved in. 

Violets in tree root hole

The “girls” are 31 now, all those books are gone. Some were given away or packed and shipped to their adult apartments or were lost in our Dec. 2018 house fire.

Thus, I am filling holes figuratively and literally, attending to 3 years of random, Cycle of Life holes in the yard, our house, my life, my body, my new studio.

I borrowed a forest

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I have great timidity in being outdoors by myself, actually. I startle easily, I perceive danger and wild animals ready to pounce where others see a calm, inviting forest. But I like to explore and have been seeking an outdoor challenge.

One of my favorite book characters is Mistress Mary quite contrary from The Secret Garden, who gathers her gumption and sets about uncovering and exploring an untamed, unfamiliar space, the out of doors.

She stole a garden, I have borrowed a forest.

Lindsay Nolting asked if I wanted to come out to her Gum Spring property and make art, yes, yes, by whatever means, yes!  She described her annual Open Studio on Sat. Sept. 29, rain or shine, in and about her home and acreage, in bucolic, historic Columbia.

In mid August, Barry and I set out on the half hour drive from Scottsville on Route 6, East along the James River, to the former Town of Columbia, taking a left on Stage Junction Road. With Dulcy dog and Lindsay, we walked the woods, explored the creeks, delighted in forest bathing. I took reference pictures, soaking in the site and imagining what sort of found materials I would use, and what form of installation would happen.

I’ve been back twice since, with clippers, hand saw, boots, and water bottle. I’m going back today, undeterred by several recent stories of copperhead snakes. Then there’s Hurricane Florence and whatever she may do tomorrow.

I’ve asked Barry to teach me some knots and lashing. I’ve chatted with my friend Michael about construction techniques and outdoor aesthetics. It’s begun. What exactly is it? Working through that TBD phase…

The postcard announces “In House and Yard” paintings by Lindsay Nolting, to which she added “Beyond the Curtilage” woodland installations by Terri Long. Points for another vocabulary word.

You’ll find me and my work in the woods, somewhere about and beyond the curtilage, standing in the creek or maybe on a fallen tree.

The Order of Things

Patterns in nature fascinate me. Fallen leaves, a bamboo grove, waves at high tide. The eye zooms in on the shape of each part and then back out on the fuller pattern.

We order things in the home, matched socks aligned in the dresser drawer. Cutlery in the kitchen. Jigsaw puzzle pieces.

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IMG_8724PuizzleWinterHarborFoundPinecones-Close

We reorder things outside, too. Like a magpie or squirrel, we collect. We take from there and put it over here. We make piles. We move rocks and make stone walls. The National Park Service says “Take only photos, leave only footprints” but sometimes, we’re rule breakers.

One Fall day, I reordered the pine cones. Then, I collected the beached detritus and settled on a ship shape path.

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I’ve started to work on a fantasy garden out in the woods behind our house. I’ve been cleaning up the forest floor and started a random, drunken path out of soapstone, granite and quartz cut-outs. But nature will reorder again and again, hiding the path in the fall leaves.

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Collecting and cleaning on the shore, Andy Goldsworthy style

I tend to pause when I see trash and discarded objects out of place, especially when they interfere with a natural setting. And so it was that I spent a May morning rearranging 50 feet of shoreline on the Potomac River to get it just so.

My husband, Barry the boatbuilder was sailing at Leesylvania State Park and invited me to tag along. As he crewed in a Lightning regatta, I stayed ashore, rode my bike, cruised the fishing pier, and landed at the shore. I picked up the most of the true trash — shredded pieces of styrofoam, plastic water bottles, liquor bottles, bait buckets, tennis balls and plastic cigarette tips — and assembled them on a sun-bleached tree trunk moored in the sand. Then I set to work, with Andy Goldsworthy like attention, to make a little art with the abundant natural materials at hand.

With much to see on the littoral beach, I settled mostly on the black walnuts, with their beautiful, warm brown and tan coloring, worn ridges and varying sizes. I stooped, gathered acorns and snails shells, too, and arranged a satisfying wabi sabi assembly, orderly yet disorderly.

Before leaving, I stood in the shade of the tree line to watch and see if anyone else would notice the ephemeral collection. I took my leave and imagined how the incoming tide would soon be reordering it all, cleaning up after me.

Stu-stu-studio, Extended Play

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How do you condense three rooms worth of art supplies and ephemera into one room?

Slowly. With gentle, brutal focus, a huge trashcan, an 80s Pandora playlist. Shuffle, repeat. Breathe, switch to Tom Waits, repeat. Haul and purge, repeat.

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Decades worth of amassing creative tools & bits & bobs. I am now methodically sorting, purging, discerning the quick and the dead, the loved and abhorred in a blackstrap molasses move up (and down) two flights of stairs. Exhilarating and liberating when a trash bag gets tied up and permanently moved out — mentally exhausting when I hold a valued thing and replace it on another undecided pile.

Yes, Marie Kondo it gave me joy, still does, now Hell’s bells, where does it go?

I am not thinking of arson. But I ponder a summer bonfire and the phrase “a move is as good as a fire.” I’ve been in this house nearly 18 years. I move physically at the gym, not so much at home.

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MooRoom

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I hit the pause button, switch gears and attempt to inaugurate my newly painted, purty, as yet uncluttered space. Create in the midst of the chaos? No good, had to pack a ditty bag, head to a friend’s home to exhale, play, drink cider and create.

Successful playdate, I made a lanyard necklace. Encouraging feedback and I’m ready to hone technique, play, repeat.

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