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April 2007: Lorrie DiCesare attends
Enameling Workshop in Tennesee

Lorrie recently participated in a week long workshop at Arrowmont Arts & Crafts School in Tennessee. The workshop covered extensive enameling techniques (glass on metal) along with metalsmithing shortcuts. Most of the Artists of Hourglass attend these types of workshops.

Hourglass wins Melrose Award!

January 2005: The Melrose Chamber of Commerce has awarded Hourglass Art and Gift Gallery "Best New Business". Hourglass has been recognized for its influence in American Arts and Crafts and bringing Art Awareness to Melrose.

     Community events include several Art Openings throughout the year, and local charity Auction donations. Several exhibiting artists from Hourglass have had individual shows at the Beebe Estate in Melrose, and other venues in Massachusetts.

Lorrie with Mayor Dolan, receiving Best New Business Award

Previous Headlines

9/10/04 -- Ellen Rolli and Gail Hamm at Arts Alive
7/1/04 -- Gary Borkan, Glassblower

4/28/04 -- Julie Kramer, Melrose T-Shirt Artist
4/22/04 -- Arts brings downtown alive!

"Cityside" from Melrose Free Press

One eye open: Art by J.J. Long chosen for
governor’s inaugural event

By Daniel DeMaina, Thursday, January 11, 2007


J..J. Long’s oil paintings are grounded in realism, but the final compositions are reminiscent of the films Waking Life and A Scanner Darkly. In those movies, actors were filmed and then, in post-production, animated. The result is extremely life-like animation but with a surrealist quality, as if the images were plucked from a lucid dream.

Long’s landscapes, portraits and still lifes possess that same quality: each figure is distinguished and true, yet seems to stare back through a filter, pushing at the edges of each line and stroke. For the viewer, the paintings are as tangible as distant memory, with large, clearly defined boundaries and opaque details filling in the rest.

That ephemeral quality of visual snapshot may be why one of Long’s paintings was featured at Gov. Deval Patrick’s North Shore inauguration reception at Merrimack College on Friday, Jan. 5.

Reception organizers were soliciting local artists to display artwork of North Shore scenery at the reception. Long submitted five samples and was chosen along with 25 other artists to take part in the event.

The chosen painting ‘Enchantment,’ a landscape of Spot Pond in Stoneham, captures the timelessness of nature nestled within that suburban oasis with the aspect of capricious childhood vision.

For Long, 25, a Melrose resident, his paintings are simply products of a singular vision — he has been legally blind in his left eye since birth.

“It’s weird, I never really think of myself as being legally blind. Sometimes I forget because I’ve been seeing the same way since I was born,” he said. “I think it’s important to let people know this is how I see.”

Long recalls a fellow artist once telling him there is a slight haze over his paintings and everything seems to be down a shade.

“After she said that, I was like, ‘I think you’re right.’ I think it looks how it’s supposed to look,” he said.

His impairment has become his strength, as Long translates from cornea to canvas to present a view of the world that only he can see.

“You can tell it’s my work, so to speak — it might have to do with a slight haze or my shadings,” he said. “I try to paint realistically and my style is realism. I paint a lot from photographs and stuff. When I look through my left eye, I can’t discern any detail at all.

“I don’t know how I’d paint with 20-20 vision. I wish someone could look through my eye and say, ‘What the hell is this?’”

Interestingly, the artist with a skewed vision of reality fell into realism as his predominant style.

“I just paint that way because I think back, when you’re in kindergarten or grade school, I always thought the best art was the one who makes it look the most real. They made something look as real as possible, that’s how you know how someone’s a good artist,” he said. “That’s not the way it is at all, but that’s just the way I was brought up, so to speak. I don’t favor realism over another type of art. I like all styles of art but that’s what I just kind of locked into from the beginning.”

“I’ve tried abstract and love abstract, and it’s not that I can’t do it, I’ve just built up my reputation as a realism oil painter.”

A clouded future
Long could not see his own future when he first arrived at the University of New Hampshire as a freshman. He chose UNH because of its strong liberal arts background, and his desire to get away from Massachusetts for a time while not straying too far from his home in Melrose. With his focus on a liberal arts education, becoming a painter was not an idea that had even crossed his mind.

“I knew I wasn’t going to be a rocket scientist,” Long said. “I think my sophomore year of college, one of my introductory painting teachers asked, ‘What’s your major?’ I said, ‘I don’t have one right now,’ and he said, ‘Well, why don’t you paint for a living.’ I said, ‘All right.’”

Long considered leaving UNH to attend a school like MassArt, but professors counseled him that applying himself and working hard to improve would dictate his success, not which institution bestowed his degree.

“Plus, I had already built up my friends there,” he said. “I had a great education up there. The professors were really good.”

After graduating from UNH in 2003, painting quickly fell by the wayside as Long sought financial stability.

“I’d say for two years after I graduated, I didn’t paint at all, just because I had immediate bills and stuff like that,” he said. “It’s not that I didn’t want to paint. I just didn’t think I could paint and make a living off of it.”

He hopped from office job to office job, all the while lacking fulfillment as he sought to strike a balance between a man’s needs and an artist’s heart.

“Month after month you’re paying off schools loans, and you’re like, ‘Wow, I’m paying for an education I’m not even using.’ I felt there was something missing, sitting by a cubicle and not doing what I love to do,” he said.

On his 24th birthday — “I did that on purpose, so I’d remember” — Long cast aside his reservations and began work as a full-time artist. For almost two years, his life has been painting as he tries gaining exposure through showings in Melrose and at galleries.

Gaining recognition
The arts community in Melrose, and the Melrose Arts and Cultural Association ####(MACA) in particular, have helped make Long’s transition to full-time artist a viable and sustainable decision.

“MACA has really been good for me, as has the Hourglass [Art and Gift Gallery] downtown,” he said. “The arts community here is just amazing, there’s so many different opportunities and so many unbelievable artists. No one I’ve come across has an ego and everyone’s willing to help each other out.”

That willingness to help out fellow artists led Long to be featured at Patrick’s inauguration reception. He heard about the event from a fellow artist, who forwarded him e-mail with information on the event. Thus, ‘Enchantment’ became part of a historic event.

‘Enchantment’ and other of Long’s works are quiet, serene and calm. That might surprise those who know Long from his other passion as lead singer in the band Asystole, whose heavy drums, thundering bass and distorted guitars are a pummeling assault on the listener in the vein of bands such as Tool, Sevendust and Mudvayne.

“I tell people all the time I paint my happy trees during the day, and then at night I turn into the devil,” Long said with a laugh. “It’s my kind of balance in nature, I guess, as a human. You can’t just be happy all the time and you can’t be angry all the time.”

Asystole have started to make a name for themselves. They were just sponsored by Jagermeister, who will pay for band merchandise, CDs and give the band an opportunity to open up for national acts.

“Someone once asked me, ‘What would you rather do, playing in a band or painting the rest of your life?” Long said. “I want to do both the rest of my life.”