








We are a New Orleans husband and wife whose decades of design and
artistic work has led us to creating art in jewelry. Always passionate
about jewelry, Melissa has designed and made jewelry for herself for
many years. Gerry produced architectural etched glass in New Orleans for
thirty years before deciding to focus on his art glass. But our
collaboration to make jewelry art was born of a stroke of serendipity.
Melissa asked Gerry to produce a miniature of one of his sculptures so
she could hang it as a pendant from a necklace of hers that she felt
needed some enhancement. The first night she wore it was to dinner with a
friend who had visitors from Paris, a viscount and his wife, a
fashionable professional woman. To our delight, she asked us to recreate
the piece for her. A piece which, we understand, is still being worn by
her in Paris.
When Gerry had his first one-person art gallery show, we were asked to
include some “Melissa and Gerry” jewelry pieces displayed as art in
shadow boxes. They sold! One of the gallery owners told Melissa that
women were fighting over the jewelry at the back of the gallery. An
artist’s dream! Thus encouraged, we decided to take the plunge by
placing jewelry pieces in other galleries representing Gerry's art
glass.
MELISSA'S STORY
At an early age, in the 1950s, I remember anticipating the monthly
arrival of the National Geographic publication. My parents sought its
observation of worlds unknown, and my brothers, the photos of
bare-breasted native women. But I found myself fascinated with the
fabulous, vividly colored necklaces that the native women wore in
dizzying numbers around their necks, and the stacks of jingling
bracelets on their long, graceful arms. This was the birth of my
long-held belief in the importance of accessories over clothes!
I began designing and making jewelry for myself many years ago. First,
to create what I thought was the perfect accessory for a particular
outfit, and then, to redesign and remake pieces I had grown fickle
about. And since Gerry had been making etched and carved glass art for
many years, as well, it was a small leap to combine our shared love of
texture, rhythm and color to create unique jewelry pieces.
GERRY'S STORY
My art background is the school of hard knocks. After some very basic
instruction in etching glass, I expanded my techniques and my artistic
ability "on the job" in my own architectural etched glass business. I
started with no ability that I knew of and no training. And no clients!
But I loved the medium of etched and carved glass for use in windows,
walls, doors, furniture, shower enclosures and signs. So I studied
photographs of etched glass and did many experiments to figure out how
to get the complex effects of shading, overlaying and stage-carving that
I saw.
As I did more and more complex commissions for clients (yes, eventually I
did have many clients!), I began to get excited by the new forms and
textures I was learning to do in glass. I was inspired by bird wings,
flowing water, waves, leaf vein patterns, rocks, mountains,
architecture, and even oil patches on water. And the rhythmic textures
and counterpoint in the music of such as Beethoven or Schubert, Phillip
Glass or Led Zeppelin added to the impulses that drive my textural
vocabulary. I started to explore ways to translate everything into the
forms and textures I could produce by etching glass.
I have now shifted my focus to the miniature work in our jewelry, using
the techniques born of this earlier work in large architectural glass.
And these small pieces weigh a whole lot less than those huge windows!
THE JEWELRY
Our work features miniature carved glass sculptures with a wide
diversity of pearls, and precious, semi-precious and sometimes very
ordinary stones and beads in delightful, often surprising styles.
From the beginning, our collaboration was fruitful. Gerry made technical
improvements necessary for working at this small scale and his
miniature sculptures took on new features, shapes and textures.
Melissa's jewelry designs are derived from her well-defined sense of
style and form and her exciting use of texture and color. And when she
combines one of Gerry's miniature sculptures with whatever satisfies her
creative eye, the result is an arresting art piece that is unique,
elegant and fun to wear. Those who have worn them (and many of our
friends have test-driven them!) tell us that they really do get noticed.