terriloui

Terri Long – Telling lost stories with found objects.

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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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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Snow daze

The snow came as expected, so I spent some time in the studio composing some new Readers Digest Book Quilts. Arranged book covers, toted firewood, played with the dog, ate a lot, napped, repeated the sequence.

Nothing’s final, all moveable and up for consideration.

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Baines Books & Coffee

My little town of Scottsville has a great coffeeshop called Baines. I’ll be showing some art on the walls throughout November.

Come for the friendly vibe, have a muffin or grilled cheese, listen to the LPs on the phonograph, meet yer friends. Oh and drink coffee, buy new and used books!

I’ll be at Baines for the reception on Saturday 11/14/15 from 3-7pm-ish.

485 Valley St., Scottsville, Virginia (434) 286-3577
Hours? Hmmm, I think… Sat-Sun 9-4, Mon-Fri 7:30-4. Good to call.

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Lost and Found – Reception

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Such a fine September night for Terri and Rose to meet and greet. Great evening to peruse the show, nibble on shrimp, visit with friends, family and make new art connectionsOur joint show at PVCC is coming to an end, pulling down art from the walls on Wed. 11/4/15.

Thanks to Beryl Solla, gallery director who penned this introduction:

“I had the intuition that Deborah Rose Guterbock and Terri Long might be a match made in heaven. Both artists have a unique style that blends powerful imagery and a profound sensitivity to material and process. In this particular instance, both bodies of work look to nature as a rich source of imagery. I feel like I have struck visual gold.

Deborah Rose Guterbock is a versatile artist who is full of energy and vitality. Her work has significant range but is consistent in its reference to the “other”. There is a lot going on in each of her pieces. We see a kind of alchemic blend of materials, imagery and intention. This interesting mix suggests other worlds, other places and other times.

Terri Long continues to explore books as an essential component of her artwork. Her trajectory over the past decade has ranged from sculpture to collage all completed with a commitment to craft and composition. Her work shows a deft hand at combining interesting imagery with clever visual puns and a playful world view.”

Lost and Found opens Friday 9/18/15

 

Nothing like the last minute, eh? Finally ready to show a sampling of cropped preview images of recent work. The show is hung and opens this Friday, got my dress picked out and I’m psyched for this happening!

 

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From our Facebook announcement:

Please join us as we celebrate the opening of our two woman exhibit in the V. Earl Dickinson Building, PVCC, Charlottesville, VA on Friday 9/18/15 from 5-7pm.

The show will feature the artwork and various conceptual takes on the idea of “Lost and Found” as explored by Terri Long and Deborah Rose Guterbock. Up-cycling, appropriation, soul searching and geographic adventuring are all relevant themes in these two bodies of work. 

Come support us, help yourself to yummy refreshments and take part in the merriment! Show runs September 18th – November 4th, come on by!

Lost and Found at PVCC Sept. 18 – Nov. 4, 2015

 

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Excited to be part of a two person show opening in Charlottesville on Friday, September 18th. Recent hand surgery has made for a challenging summer and for preparing works, but all is well and I’m psyched to deliver the work in just a few days.

Materials? Discarded library books and ephemera, old text book covers, marbled end papers, leather bindings, one feather, one tiger and quite a few butterflies.

More to come.

Say it!

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Communication comes in many forms, it’s important to get the message out. Say it, however temporary, wherever possible with whatever materials are handy. State it multiple times if need be.

As a visual artist, I’m keen on letterforms, fonts and signage big and small. I have a soft spot for the quirky, grammatically-challenged, warn and forgotten ones.

For your viewing pleasure, here is a sampling of old signage and hand-crafted messages. All images found as is, except the last one, heh, heh, heh.

I NEED MY WIRE

I really NEED MY WIRE

IWillBuyArt

Relief

YouAreBeautiful

YouAreTheLight3209

PortlandWhat

WithPipeAndBook2281

GreatBook

AlphaBooks

DoorClosed

DoorOpen

CashOnly

Beer

ScrapPaper

AvoidGettingStuck3229

NotReadyYet

INeedMyWine

Salvaging Random Row Books

Mural and letters.

Mural and letters.

Letters at home.

Letters at home.

Thief apprehended, kitchen implement returned.

Thief apprehended, kitchen implement returned.

 

I tend to set my sights on the ephemeral, worn out and all-things-about-to-disappear. Usually, I come up just shy of the actual disappearance, cutting it extremely close or missing it. In 2013, I didn’t miss, I scored with five vowels and nine hardy consonants, salvaging these letters for some future, who-knows-what usage.

A small, independent, used bookstore and community art space I loved in Charlottesville announced it was closing, heralding some changes to come on West Main Street. Ryan Deramus, the stalwart owner of Random Row Books* sold off his inventory, tipped his hat and cycled away. The building was slated for demolition and a hotel to be built on that footprint. Feeling a bit like the Lorax, I climbed on the tree stump out front. I wanted to claim some vestige of what soon wouldn’t be, something familiar, some token: the sans-serif letters. Ryan told me I was welcome to the signage, relating how he’d found scrap wood in the building, handmade the 14 letters, painted and mounted them. I struck a deal with the building’s owner and site project manager to get in-and-out on the Sunday before the No Trespassing signs appeared, and I bartered with a co-worker (another Ryan) who is good on ladders to get the job done.

Ryan E. helps with salvage.

Ryan E. helps with salvage.

Ryan E. with W. Better this guy wielding the power tools than me.

Ryan E. with W (or maybe upside down M?)

I’ve made several trips to the site as the former building became rubble and the new one ascends. The Cheyenne mural seems to cast it’s own eye and mute opinion on the goings on.

In 2014, I took the letters out on the town. We visited with artist Simon Draper and his Habitat for Artists residency at The Bridge. His habitat, made of recycled materials, was constructed on site, then deconstructed to spend a weekend at the Main Street Market and now lives at the Ix Art Park in Charlottesville.

The white paint on the letters is chipping in the expected wabi-sabi way after six years of weather. We continue to have wordsmith and anagram fun out back by our shed. My typographer’s eye tells me I need to fix the kerning, too tight propped on the ladder as is. But I can fix that. It’s OK man.

(*Do read the wonderful backstory on the bookstore and mural when you have a chance, I admit I barely did it justice. We bought books, saw live bands, theatre and picked up our veggie CSA there back in the day. Joni Mitchell knows… they paved paradise, put up a parking lot.)

Bookboxes at the Gift Forest, ho!

I donned my craft snood and fashioned some gift items for sale at the Gift Forest, an annual pop-up holiday gift shop hosted by The Bridge gallery with 60+ Virginia artisans and vendor wares. Runs December 1st to 24th, weekdays 12-8PM and weekends 10AM-6PM (Christmas Eve opened 10AM-4PM), 209 Monticello Road in Charlottesville, by the Spudnuts.

I had made and tucked away (forgot and lost actually) two prototype bookboxes and decided to make more with my favorite source material, recycled Reader’s Digest Condensed Books. Uniform in height and depth, with faux leather spine, sturdy case binding and attractive graphic print covers, I have a collection of nearly 600 covers to choose from.

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Reader’s Digest Condensed Book covers.

The bookboxes have sturdy, contrasting print sides and mini magnetic closures. Perfect for desktop display or to cache treasures deep in the bookcase. I raided my sewing basket for vintage buttons, ribbon scraps and leather tabs.

The six bookboxes and four bookbags pictured below are at the Gift Forest and available for purchase: $25 each bookbox and $45 each bookbag. Have a favorite book you want transformed into objet d’art or unique whatnot? I take commissions.

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4 little bookbags: Seahorse, plum gold floral, brown plaid and blue quatrefoil.

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I popped in opening night, the first of December to check it out. Strange day, nearly 70 degrees. Yet, it is that time and we will shop in sandals or boots. In my heart, I covet and would add 86% of what I saw there to my wish list. Like that neon sign across town saying, Get In Here: go to the Gift Forest, get in there. But save a few things for me, please.

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Outside looking in.

Outside looking in.

Bookbags, kimchi and CSAs. Say what?

 

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We’ve had a CSA (community supported agriculture) vegetable share with Bellair Farm for three years and reupped for 2015. Can’t compliment Farmer Jaime, owner Cynnie and the crew enough. Besides the abundant fields and ability to choose what you take home in your weekly bag, there are pick your own fields with sunflowers or hot peppers, you can hang out and bring a picnic lunch on Saturdays, hike the walking trails, play with the bunnies and just be on the farm. Our challenge is in eating enough veggies! Always leftovers from each week’s share. At the season-end potluck supper in late October, they provided even more abundance… and with that additional bag, my fridge actually exploded.

Sifting through the vegetable carnage, I know that pickling and canning really should be something I do, but don’t. However, I enjoy fermenting. I made my first pseudo kimchi with gorgeous daikon radishes, carrots and everything but the kitchen sink. My husband commented on the stench, not knowing it was fermenting beautifully and soon to be plated with dinners ahead.

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Our other CSA experience (community supported art) is with The Bridge in Charlottesville. In 2013, I was one of four artists invited to produce works for this inaugural offering. Here are images of some of the 50 bookbags I produced from all recycled materials. They’ve expanded the CSA program in 2014 with six local artists and shares are still available.

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