terriloui

Terri Long – Telling lost stories with found objects.

Tag: books

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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Baines01

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 at PVCC Sept. 18 – Nov. 4, 2015

 

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PostcardSnap2

 

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.

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.

Books are magical


CvilleArtBlog

Rose Guterbock & A.I.Miller are the artists behind CvilleArtBlog, a great new resource covering the artistic array of Charlottesville. I met them both at the opening reception for Ex Ex Libris and shortly after, they shared this review.

Long has captured the essence of Terry Pratchett’s L-Space Theory and uses it to remind us of the importance of books. By weaving a tapestry with their covers, she shows how they can warp space and time to remind us of who we are and what makes up our history.

The show hangs for another week. The Bridge is officially open Monday-Wednesday 12-6pm, Saturday 10am – 3pm, but is hosting events nearly every night this week, many as part of The VA Festival of the Book, 3-20 to 3-24, 2013. Tonight there’s storytelling with the Big Blue Door Jam and tomorrow a wild poetry slam and dance party at the Emily Dickinson Afterparty.

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I will be hanging out gallery sitting this Saturday 3/23 from 10-3. Pop on by!

Catching up with Cville Niche

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Kind words from the fine folks at Cville Niche who highlight all things interesting, creative, musical and delicious in Charlottesville. I very much enjoyed this Q & A about books and the opportunity to crow about the upcoming VA Festival of the Book to boot.

They allowed me to wax about my scavenging, collecting and collaging; plug favorite book stores, books and authors, too.

Speaking of authors, I greatly admire them, the whole lot. But I have never written a book, yet flattered no less, when I came across this “edited” version of the flyer at the McIntire Recyling Book Bin.

What’s in a word… Author, Artist?! The text describes art from books but I didn’t have the heart to edit their edit.

Hanging out

We hung the show late last night. The weather never cooperated, steady cold rain all day and night. None of us wanted to load and unload cars, but eventually we capitulated and met at 7:30pm to install the show at The Bridge.

This is a two person show and I share the walls with Joanna Mullen. She brought two of her Art Box framing crew friends along. Delightful ladies who had the wherewithall to fetch bagels from Bodo’s to help us keep our wits.

Opening reception is Friday 3/1 from 6 to 8pm, catching the early and late First Friday gallery crawlers, and is generally a great scene. Now for the sartorial concern, what am I going to wear?

Pinched reflection in the plate glass window of The Bridge.

Pinched reflection in the plate glass window of The Bridge.

Joanna, Amanda and Lana are framing queens. Much jocularity and banter kept me thoroughly entertained.

Joanna, Amanda and Lana are framing queens. Much jocularity and banter kept me thoroughly entertained.

Who doesn't like a good perspective shot.

Who doesn’t like a good perspective shot.

Art on walls

A peak into homes, shops and public spaces that feature my Readers Digest Condensed Book and Encylopedia Quilts.

Prism Book Quilt on Billie's wall, 2008

Prism Book Quilt on Billie’s wall, 2008

Royal Patch Book Quilt on Posh Boutique wall, 2008

Royal Patch Book Quilt on Posh Boutique wall, 2008

Cerulean Book Quilt on 2nd Street Gallery wall, 2008

Cerulean Book Quilt on 2nd Street Gallery wall, 2008

Encyclopedia Book Quilts on parent's wall, 2009

Encyclopedia Book Quilts on parent’s wall, 2009

Fools Gold Book Quilt on Paige's wall, 2009

Fools Gold Book Quilt on Paige’s wall, 2009

First book quilt on Nature Vistionary Art wall, 2006

First book quilt on Nature Vistionary Art wall, 2006

PieBookQuilt

BG and I review Pie’s recent acquisition, December 2012.

 

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Amish Quilt, gifted to Laura in 2009.

 

Divining the discarded.

Actually, these are Barry’s words. He is the writer in the household, and when queried if he had anything to say about my work, he gifted me this:

I’ve been watching Terri collect things and arrange them together for years, but only recently have I begun to understand why and what they mean to her. It’s this passing of the physical world that she captures in her collections, and especially the passing of the physicality – the lives, the people and the artifacts themselves.

Like an archeologist of the not quite modern, the almost gone, she rescues pieces of everyday life just before it vanishes. The way a piece of jawbone or a bronze pin pulled from the ground can reveal the story of a once thriving ancient civilization, she finds in the recently discarded – things once highly valued and no longer – signs of a life that is just now passing.

Divining the discarded.

She sees stories in the insignificant. Lagging somewhat behind, she follows in our tracks after we pass, reading our footprints, picking up the things we leave behind, giving them a turn in the sunlight, then puts them in her pocket to take home.

For the past several years her attention has turned to books. We have just passed through the golden age of book publishing, when books were cheaper and more plentiful than at any other time in history. But that time is almost over. Once valued as prized possessions, books are now discarded in great stacks of dried wood pulp, piled near the curb like leaves for composting. The more sentimental owners, still attached to their old friends, drop them at yard sales or Goodwill stores, or in recycling boxes, a last chance for temporary salvation on their way to the dump.

Terri collects these fleeting artifacts, too, and arranges their pieces and parts into patterns to tell our stories. A mosaic of textbook covers recalls the time we rejoiced when our class was chosen to receive new textbooks. Their covers, unblemished, crackled when opened to proudly write our names first as owner and caretaker of this container and conveyor of knowledge. There are odd how-to books from the ‘50s – How to Write Good Social Letters, and Better Rural Living, and Sportsmanlike Driving – when our parents saw the world differently from us. Each cover, including the book itself, a microcosm of how we used to think.

But what I am reminded of, when looking at Terri’s work, is the imminent mortality of it all. Her presentation is spare, without artifice, her own personality almost frustratingly withheld from view. No more than creatively arranged samples of a most recent past – simple, unadorned, laid out in grids like specimen drawers in the basement of a museum. For a sensitive observer, they create the unmistakable feeling of wabi-sabi, the Japanese esthetic of transience and impermanence. These recent works seem to say in a soft voice “Books are not long for this world, look at what they were while you still can.”