Terri Logan is one of our best loved jewelers. Each piece is unique due to the individuality of the stones involved. Her work has national appeal, and several on our staff wear her work regularly. Each stone is bezel-set and many sections have small etched shapes on the back.
As she wrote some years ago,"Becoming
a jewler/metalsmith was less than a direct path for me. I was
a psychotherapist for eighteen years before I decided to become
a full-time artist. Like most of us, I began making art around
the age of three. Art was my first real language, my first
record of the world and my experiences. By nine, I knew I
had some talent, but it wasn't until my twenties that I discovered
sculpture...
"Narrowing
my academic pursuits became a difficult task since I hate
to refuse myself anything, thus I was fortunate to secure
a double major. I was a second year BFA sculpture student
with a child-psychology co-major when my studies were interrupted.
Economy and efficiency led to the decision to graduate early
with a BA from Indiana University. In graduate school, I was
able to unite my love for art and psychology by receiving
my clinical degree, MAT (Master of Art Therapy) from Wright
State University. Thus I began a wonderful professional career,
a general private practice in which I utilized the arts in
many forms of treatment, diagnosis and prevention.
"Therapy
was an intense and demanding profession, and for me, it had
a life-span. With burn-out approaching, retirement plans set
in motion, I took a jewelry class at a nearby art center.
"I
was three again!
"I
was making art!
"I'm
now 10 in 'jeweler years' and still discovering my identity.
My work is based on formal concerns, design principles and
function. Coming from a fine arts perspective, function is
a new and important dimension for me. Coming from a psychological
perspective, I make jewelry because of the intimacy the function
allows. I use metal and stone (river rocks) because they
are inherently strong materials with a rich historic value
and intrinsic links to our civilization. Their abundant character,
separate or in relation to each other, offers infinite possibilities
as a language."
Terri
Logan has garnered many awards and prestigious gallery placements,
including regular representation in the annual SOFA exhibitions. She is a resident of Indiana. Please call for current work. Our selection is always changing.

Pieces such as this pin may be worn as a pendant with the addition of a chain with a bale slide, something Terri also provides.