Alexandra Nechita
Alexandra Nechita
Alexandra Nechita began working in pen and ink at the age of two. By age five she had graduated to watercolors; by seven she was using oils and acrylics. Her first show was held in 1994 when she was 8; soon after, her talent and perceived similarities to Pablo Picasso led to her being nicknamed the “Petite Picasso.”
Following her first show, she was immediately offered an exhibit at the prestigious Mary Paxon Gallery, where the exhibit attracted the attention of legitimate art critics and the media, who began telling the world about this rarest of child prodigies—an abstract cubist painter who had only recently turned nine years old. Over the following months, Alexandra was invited to one exhibit after another. As she neared her tenth birthday, she had already held an astonishing eight solo exhibits, and her talent was quickly being recognized by an art world astonished by her virtuosity.
Alexandra Nechita’s art gives the viewer as sense of familiarity with her Picasso-like abstraction, while also pulling us in with her nuances of the shapes and forms of fertility through the female form and the freedom of the flying birds she incorporates into her woks.
Alexandra’s career has elevated to a level unimaginable for all but the truest of art masters. She is one of the most recognized artists in the world: her exhibits attract crowds, and her paintings sell out to hordes of eager collectors as quickly as she creates them.