FINE ART CONVERSATIONS/ FIVE ARTISTS Sparks Dialogue through Color

James Yarosh Associates Gallery Announces the 2023 Fine Art & Design Show April 15 to Sept. 30, 2023

HOLMDEL, N.J.— Fine Art Conversations/Five Artists, the inaugural 2023 exhibition at James Yarosh Associates Gallery, presents a stimulating celebration of color and debating artistic voices.

The show, which runs April 15 through September 30, 2023, features Miriam Beerman, Robert Melee, Iliya Mirochnik, Sheba Sharrow and Vjachaslav Zabelin. The opening weekend is April 15 and 16 with hours 12-4pm both Saturday and Sunday.

“This exhibition explores the conversations of five artists from various backgrounds to discover visual synergy and common ground,” says gallerist James Yarosh. The show is grouped by artist, which allows viewers to experience the integrity of each artistic voice while still allowing for a dialogue among the artists in the room.

“This new show continues the emboldened conversations started with Miriam Beerman 1923–2022: Nothing Has Changed, last year’s featured exhibition,” says Yarosh, who served as guest curator for an exhibition of the same name at Monmouth University last fall. “Now that we are post-pandemic, I invite guests to return to the gallery to explore and engage in dialogue about the art and what the artists are communicating to us across time through the language of visuals, not words.”

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MIRIAM BEERMAN, Shower II, 1999, 68in x 60in, oil on canvas/ Mixed Media

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MIRIAM BEERMAN, Lódź ( Ghetto documents ) 1990's, 65in x 65in, oil on canvas

MIRIAM_0002_3. MIRIAM BEERMAN, Flame, 1999, 68in x 67in, oil on canvas

MIRIAM BEERMAN, Flame, 1999, 68in x 67in, oil, collage on canvas

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MIRIAM BEERMAN, Untitled, 1985, 59in x 72in, oil on canvas

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ROBERT MELEE, 2015, Untitled Bower Curtain 1, 89 7/8in x 48 1/4in x 4 in, Enamel and mylar on fiberglass and wood

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ROBERT MELEE, 2015, Untitled Bower Curtain 3, 89 7/8in x 48 1/4in x 4 in, Enamel and mylar on fiberglass and wood

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ROBERT MELEE, 2020, Diller Curtain 2, 26in x34 in, gold + aluminum leaf, enamel, plaster, burlap, fiberglas on wood

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ROBERT MELEE, 2015, Untitled, 48in x 43in, enamel on paper

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ILIYA MIROCHNIK, 2020, Annunciation, 79in x 84in, oil on canvas

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ILIYA MIROCHNIK, Old Letters, 2013, 64in x 36in, oil on canvas

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ILIYA MIROCHNIK, A Mask of Bone and Iron Lines, 2014, 48in x 60in, oil on canvas

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ILIYA MIROCHNIK, War is Simple like a Monument, 2015, 37in x 60in, oil on canvas

sheba thumbnai_0003_4. SHEBA SHARROW - Millennial Dream

SHEBA SHARROW, Millennial Dream, 1995, 56in x 76in, acrylic on canvas

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SHEBA SHARROW, Ahkmatova's Troubled Sleep, 1995, 42 x 36 inches, acrylic on canvas

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SHEBA SHARROW, Homeland, 1996, 48in X 42in, mixed media on arches paper

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SHEBAR SHARROW, Annunciation, 1990, 60in x 60in, Acrylic, mixed media on arches paper

zabelin thumbnails_0003_Vyacheslav Zabelin, A Window, oil on panel, 14x17.5, 1986

VYACHESLAV ZABELIN, 1986, A Window, 14in x 17.5in, oil on panel,

zabelin thumbnails_0002_Vyacheslav Zabelin, June, 1992, 10.5x13.5, oil on canvas

VYACHESLAV ZABELIN, 1992, June, 10.5in x 13.5in, oil on canvas

zabelin thumbnails_0001_Vyacheslav Zabelin, Park in the Fall, 1985, 25.5x27.5, oil on canvas

VYACHESLAV ZABELIN, 1985, Park in the Fall, 25.5in x 27.5in, oil on canvas

zabelin thumbnails_0000_Vyacheslav Zabelin, Path in the Park, 1999, 22x25.5, oil on canvas

VYACHESLAV ZABELIN, 1999, Path in the Park, 22in x 25.5in, oil on canvas

“In this grouping, one sees Robert Melee’s abstracted works that include unconventional mediums offering inspired commentary regarding the era of his youth, sitting cozily next to colorist Miriam Beerman’s figurative expressionist paintings, which show how life’s darkness can be defeated with prismatic light,” Yarosh says. “Meanwhile, Sheba Sharrow’s humanist paintings become more beautiful the more difficult the subject matter. These content-charged and masterfully painted pieces by Beerman and Sharrow illustrate why we need to re-examine female artists of the 20th century.



“In a separate dialogue, works by Iliya Mirochnik — a romantic painter who is grounded in academic traditions but remains contemporary in his storytelling — are seen in a new light when juxtaposed with those by Vjachaslav Zabelin, who is considered the father of Russian Impressionism and whose work captures the light and quiet spaces between subject and artist,” Yarosh continues. “The diversity of the artwork curated together creates an exciting cacophony of color and the result within the gallery walls becomes that of pure joy.”

An artist, gallerist and designer of curated homes, Yarosh hones his eye by studying how the great museums of the world display thought-provoking exhibitions. “Whether I am hanging an exhibition or a client’s collection, there is a visual ‘word’ association that come into play, and the collective results are wonderfully complicated and fulfilling,” he says.

Curated design objects that complement the art — a nod to Yarosh’s mission to showcase what it means to live with fine art — are part of this exhibition. Included are a collection of vintage artisan rugs from Josh Nazmiyal, Rug & Kilim; framing by Marcelo Barvaro, who has served as the gallery’s framemaker for two decades; and textiles, including traditional horsehair and examples from fabric houses such as Bevilacqua, Clarence House, Dedar, Fortuny, Hill Brown, Nobilis and Scalamandré.

Yarosh’s art collecting expertise was recently featured in the international magazine The World of Interiors INDEX, and the Spring 2023 NJ HOME magazine highlights his interior design, which includes residences with artworks by Miriam Beerman, Sheba Sharrow and a custom rug created with Nazmiyal within the home’s collections.

The gallery is open to the public every Saturday 12-4 p.m. with weekdays and evenings by appointment. Email the gallery care of jamesyarosh@yahoo.com to be added to lists of special events and salon evenings invitations. Fine Art Conversations/Five Artists furthers the momentum of Yarosh’s curatorial activism of recent years.

Artists featured:

Miriam Beerman (1923–2022)

When Miriam Beerman passed away in February 2022 at 98, she left a six-decade legacy of humanist expressionism works that are included in the permanent collections of over 60 museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney, LACMA, Phillips Collection, National Gallery of Art and Victoria & Albert Museum.

Beerman focused on humanistic subjects as someone whose role was to bear witness to her times. In her hands, subjects of mankind — man vs. the world — are transformed through a storytelling of the shared experiences of men, women and children. Her created worlds also include a special sensitivity to animals and a call for humans to acknowledge their responsibility to all living things and the effects our actions have upon them. As a gifted colorist, her work connects on an almost primal level. Beerman also was a pioneer: She was one of the first women to be given a one-person show at the Brooklyn Museum, in 1971.

Robert Melee (b. 1966)

Robert Melee is interested in the universal psychology of the everyday, which he makes his own. His multimedia practice (painting, sculpture, photography, video, installation) finds its psychological analogues in the blurring of beauty and grotesquerie, nostalgia and critique.

Melee studied at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. Solo exhibitions include: Tucson MOCA; Columbus College of Art & Design, Columbus, Ohio; Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee; Corcoran Museum of Art, Washington, D.C.; Higher Pictures, New York City; MoMA PS, Queens, N.Y.; Sculpture Center, Queens, N.Y.; The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York City; White Cube, London; David Koransky Gallery, Los Angeles; Portugal Biennial, Lisbon; and Gallery Hyundai, Korea. Collections include: The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City; Haifa Museum of Art, Haifa, Israel; Portland Museum of Art, Oregon; and Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin College, Ohio, among others. Residencies include the Center For Contemporary Art (Futura), Prague, and the National Foundation for the Advancement in the Arts, Miami. He is the recipient of the 2015 Pollock-Krasner Award, New York.

Iliya Mirochnik (b. 1988)

Iliya Mirochnik— who emigrated from Odessa, Ukraine, in the early 1990s — studied at LaGuardia High School of Music and Art and Performing Art and in the Bridgeview School of Fine Arts in New York under the tutelage of professors trained in the art academies of the former Soviet Union. He earned his MFA in painting from the I.E. Repin State Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture in St. Petersburg, Russia.

He has been recipient of a number of prestigious scholarships and awards, both in the United States and Russia, including first place in both the American Portrait Society’s International Portrait Competition and the IconBay sculpture competition, where he was selected to execute his design for a large outdoor sculptural installation in Miami. In 2014, he taught at Dacia Gallery’s Artist Residency Program in Sibiu, Romania. Mirochnik, featured on the New Masters Academy website for online art instruction, has been a full-time professor at the Ringling College of Art and Design in Sarasota, Fla. since 2018, where he teaches painting and drawing in the Illustration and Game Design Departments.

Sheba Sharrow (1926–2006)

Sheba Sharrow’s expressionist paintings are masterful and refined, engaging us with mortality and desire, vulnerability and power, warfare and spirituality. Her figurative paintings bear witness to human suffering, struggle and liberation.

Born in Brooklyn in 1926 to Russian-Jewish immigrant parents and raised in Chicago, Sharrow was a child of the Great Depression and World War II, a participant in the social justice movements of the 1960s and ’70s and saw the bloody roads walked for civil rights and the damages wrought by wars. She earned her BFA at the Art Institute of Chicago, studying with Boris Anisfeld and Joseph Hirsch. She continued her studies at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and earned an MFA at the Tyler School of the Arts at Temple University.

She has been considered part of the “Chicago School” of imagist painters. Through a vigorous and poetic hand, her work reflects on brutality and simultaneously pays homage to the animating power of solidarity, warning us: Remember, history’s tragedies repeat.

Vjachaslav Zabelin (1935–2001)

Considered a living master during his lifetime in Moscow, Vjachaslav Zabelin has 300 paintings in museum collections throughout the world. A Surikov professor and artist who was held such high regard by the state, Zabelin was awarded studio space with views of the Kremlin.

Born in 1935 in Khamovniki, an old region of Moscow,  Zabelin was strongly influenced by the Russian world around him yet was particularly gifted with a rare ability to see light and color in the non-abstracted beauty of objects. His creative work is of great importance to the culture of Russia because of its place in the history of the Moscow School of Painting.

ABOUT JAMES YAROSH ASSOCIATES FINE ART & DESIGN GALLERY:

Established in 1996, the James Yarosh Associates Gallery in Holmdel, New Jersey, was founded upon and remains loyal to its vision: to represent fine art for art’s sake and to curate gallery collections and thoughtfully present art and interior design specification with an artist’s eye and understanding. Yarosh, an artist and well-published interior designer offers a full-scale gallery and design center where clients can associate with other like-minded individuals located just one hour outside Manhattan.

   

As a designer, Yarosh travels the world, studying how the greatest museums display their art and visits artists’ homes to understand how the artists themselves live with their art. This study on both a grand and small scale, helps inform Yarosh’s work with his clients. His unique approach —coupled with his work in show houses and experience in large-scale residential design projects of over 20,000 square feet—has led to his designs being featured in regional and international magazines.

As a gallerist Yarosh advocates  for what greatness looks like in the arts, showcasing at his destination gallery the works of both new and established museum-recognized artists of merit in a space designed to replicate the intimacy of an artist’s home.  Exhibitions such as Miriam Beerman- Rediscover (2022) The Humanist Show (2021)  Sheba Sharrow: History Repeats (2020) the NYC art fair, Art on Paper (2021) and Miriam Beerman: Nothing has Changed, guest curator at Monmouth University (2022) help foster the idea of art as intellectual engagements that sit above decoration in design hierarchy adding exponentially to the experience of living with art.

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PHOTOS: Patricia Burke