Nothing but a number
JOSE J. SANTOS
Alexandra Nechita’s story sounds like it was dreamt up in Tinsel
Town.
The idea of a girl in elementary school, a daughter of Romanian
immigrants, displaying artistic talent and technique that is compared
to Pablo Picasso and Joan Miro is the stuff of the silver screen.
But it actually happened.
And it’s still happening.
Nechita is 18 now and a body of her work from her professional
career, which started when she was 10 years old, is being shown at
the Wentworth Gallery in Fashion Island. The show gives a glimpse
into the mind of a child prodigy and communicates an ever-growing
truth in our culture:
Age is just a number.
SMILING CATS AND SODA POP
Looking at the Wentworth’s selection of Nechita’s works, it’s
interesting to see what the 10-year-old, then 12-year-old and
eventual teenager was painting. An unexpected juxtaposition arises
between her Picasso-esque visual presentation and what she chooses to
depict.
The viewer isn’t seeing death on battlefields or nude models
posing with sultry wantonness like Picasso’s most famous forays into
the abstract. In Nechita’s world, it’s a girl playing in the warm sun
in “Miss Maui†and a young lady carefully putting on lipstick in “In
The Land of Aphrodite.â€
The mind takes a couple of beats to reconcile the “seriousâ€
abstract technique with the sometimes not-so-serious subject matter.
It reminded me of seeing “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon†for the
first time, the highly dramatic character piece infused with
high-flying martial arts and acrobatics -- two very different worlds
colliding, crashing and cohabiting.
Like Ang Lee’s Oscar-winning flick, Nechita’s art works in an
oddly refreshing way. It really is hard to fathom unless you’re
standing in front of one of her works.
Take “Untitled #6,†for instance. There are two forms wrapped in
an embrace. The figures are abstracted, with angular bodies, enlarged
eyes and extra limbs, indicative of a movement: a young man seems to
be putting his arm around a young girl, perhaps a sweetheart.
On her head, she wears a ribbon. From his hand -- or hers, it’s
abstract art -- she takes a sip from a cup of soda.
A different kind of “pop†art, indeed, but it’s just as
refreshing.
The texture and quality of the painting is astounding. Nechita is
a master with color and her ability to maintain proportion and depth
at the scale she works is impressive. Rich and vibrant, the painting
is flawlessly made.
But the exclamation point comes when you note Nechita painted
“Untitled #6†in 1999 -- when she was only 13.
Sweet little cues in the skilled-beyond-her-years work reveal a
girl at play. The appearance of smiling cats, pairs of earrings,
parked cars and golf clubs (perhaps belonging to her father) in her
work demonstrate that Nechita is growing up, and the viewer gets to
witness it unfold on her canvas.
It’s like watching a teenage boy sing about first kisses and
Friday night lights with the force and bravado of Pavarotti.
CONFRONTING THE CYNICAL
In the last four years, she’s moved from depicting wide-eyed
moments of discovery, captured in works like “Untitled #6†and
“Walking Straight, Feeling Strong,†to more mature, savvy takes on
the world like “The Wine Taster,†a painting that shows a figure
hardily chomping on a bunch of grapes with wine bottles sitting in
the background.
In the lower right-hand corner of the work, in black bold letters,
some advice is written: “If the critics love you have a drink. If not
have two.â€
Nechita has had her fair share of criticism over her career,
ranging from glowing to ghastly.
It’s hard for some critics to fathom how someone so young can be
so highly rewarded for painting such seemingly derivative work. Even
if one ignores the media hype around Nechita’s technique, ignores the
“petite Picasso†moniker, and just concentrates on the work itself,
the subject matter she has chosen reveals what could be perceived as
a weakness: a relative lack of life experience to fuel her artwork.
But that’s a cynical way to judge Nechita. The real allure of her
work, the real gasp-inducer, is the brilliance of its physical being.
The canvas, the paint, the colors, the shapes and size, all the
corporeal elements are constructed with such mind-boggling
craftsmanship that one can’t dismiss her work.
Nechita is blessed with the intangible creative spark that makes
artists what they are, and she has reinforced that spark with years
of hard work.
That’s impressive at any age.
* JOSE J. SANTOS is the art director and news desk chief. He can
be reached at [email protected].
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