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Madisonville artist’s paintings were an eerie premonition of the war in Ukraine

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Artist Alexander Stolin still has a pretty strong eastern-European accent, though he’s spent the last 30 years living on the North Shore. Back in 1992, when he was 29, he emigrated from Ukraine, where he was born.

It would be easy to interpret his solo exhibit at Jonathan Ferrara Gallery  as a reaction to the ongoing war in his former homeland. The black and white paintings are shadowy, claustrophobic, and grim. Stolin said he based his current style on film noir detective movies and such. The sun never quite shines in the world he’s invented. The whole vibe is uniformly melancholy.

Stolin’s paintings certainly seem to reflect the helplessness and grief he’s experiencing as he watches events in Ukraine unfold on CNN.

But it’s not that simple. Most of the paintings were finished in 2020 and 2021, before the war started. They’re not a reaction to the Russian invasion, they’re a pessimistic premonition.

Stolin, 59, had carved out a place for himself in the New Orleans art scene in the early 2000s. He was represented by a Julia Street gallery and gaining a following of fans.

Then he seemed to disappear. Nothing dramatic had happened, it was just that fatherhood and his day job as a scenic artist in the movie industry kept him busy — too busy for a second career as a painter.

“I got wrapped up in the real world,” he said.







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Notice the atomic bomb test house, in this detail of Alexander Stolin’s painting ‘Crystal Ball:Silence,’ at Jonathan Ferrara Gallery, 400A Julia Street




Just a question of when

But over the past few years, he’s returned to his brushes. Middle age was a time for nostalgia, and evaluation. It was time to reconcile his two selves, the Louisianian and the Ukrainian underneath. Being Ukrainian, Stolin said, can be complicated.

Stolin said his father was Jewish and his mother was Eastern Orthodox, but during the Soviet era, it wasn’t easy to express either faith. Stolin said his family had endured the deprivations of communism, World War II, the Cold War, then the confusion and insecurity after the fall of the Soviet Union. The recent Russian invasion, he said, was no surprise. No surprise at all. Russia had been a constant threat for years.

Being Ukrainian, he said, is to anticipate profound disruption. Stolin said he was raised with the credo: “It’s not a question of if, it’s just a question of when.”

And that’s what Stolin’s exhibit, “Memories Project,” is all about. In one painting, young boys build sand castles on the beach as aircraft carriers lurk in the ocean behind them. In another, a family consults a crystal ball, while seated beneath a painting of a test house that was built to determine the power of an atomic bomb. The sun rises in one painting, but the sky remains smoky gray, as a squadron of silver fighter planes drone overhead. The only smiles seen in the whole exhibit are on the masks of the children dressed as goblins or clowns in Stolin’s painting “Halloween.”







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The only smiles in the entire exhibit are on the faces of the goblin/clown masks in Alexander Stolin’s painting “Halloween” (detail).




Living the dream

If there’s any escape from this mirthless world, it might be represented by the 48-star flag of the United States in the background of Stolin’s painting of an elementary school class picture titled “Say Cheese.” Perhaps escape is the answer?

Stolin said he was always aware that he had distant family living in the United States. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, as communist power wavered, he took the opportunity to join them. He first traveled to San Francisco, then almost immediately to Hattiesburg Mississippi, where long-lost cousins lived. Those cousins encouraged him to stay in the region. He met a woman. His American life had begun.

Of course, Stolin said, he’s full of rage, regret and disbelief about the war on the other side of the world. “I live and breathe it,” he said.

To understand his feelings, he asks us to imagine if the place we grew up were steadily being destroyed before our eyes. Yet he also asks us not to consider him a victim. Having telephone conversations with old friends in Ukraine who are holding out in bomb shelters has made him acutely aware of his own safety and comfort in Madisonville.







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The American Flag in Alexander Stolin’s painting ‘Say Cheese’ (detail) may imply the possibility of escape.




“I’m living the dream,” he said, without irony.

A few months back, Stolin visited Jonathan Ferrara gallery to see an exhibit by an old friend. Ferrara asked him if he was still making art. Stolin said that, in fact, he was. But he told Ferrara “It’s really dark; I don’t know who would want it.”

But Ferrara gambled that we would.  Take a break from the festivities during Saturday’s White Linen Night block party to visit Stolin’s bittersweet return to the fine art scene and momentarily allow yourself to be wrapped up in the real world.

Jonathan Ferrara Gallery is located at 400A Julia Street. “Memories Project” continues through Aug. 27. For more information, visit the gallery website







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‘Sunrise’ by Alexander Stolin, does not seem particularly sunny.




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