Portrait of the artist as a young woman
Jose J. Santos
In college, missing class is missing class, period.
When UCLA freshman Alexandra Nechita needed to skip one of her
classes recently, the 18-year-old artist knew her professor probably
wouldn’t care whether her alarm clock didn’t go off or her calendar
was booked with a speaking engagement, an absence was still an
absence.
“You can’t just say that you’re going to Tennessee to give a
lecture,” Nechita said. “You can’t do that here. The professors teach
thousands of kids each week. They don’t care what you do.”
Not the typical day off for a first-year art major, but there are
many things atypical about Nechita. The painter and prodigy has been
in the spotlight of the art world since the tender age of 10.
Nechita will be making an appearance at the Wentworth Gallery
today, promoting an exhibit of her work.
THE JOY OF ANONYMITY
The daughter of Romanian immigrants, Nechita burst into the
national spotlight as a child and attracted enough media attention to
be labeled “the petite Picasso.”
She has appeared on talk shows and is collected by such Hollywood
luminaries as Whoopi Goldberg, David Letterman and Oprah Winfrey; she
has been exhibited everywhere from the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum to the Vatican; and she even has a performing arts center
named after her at her alma mater, Lutheran High School of Orange
County in Orange.
Right now, though, she is relishing her anonymity on the big
campus.
“A lot of people remember me from when I was 10 or 11 years old,
so they can’t put a face to my name now,” Nechita said. “It’s so much
better this way. I can walk into class like any other art student.
That’s exactly what I wanted.”
It has been her dream since fifth grade to attend UCLA. Now that
she’s living it, she is ecstatic about what she’s learning and the
“godly” professors she gets to work with, many of them working
artists she admires.
CONFESSIONS OF A
‘SUPER, SUPER NERD’
Nechita is “looking forward to the transformation” she will
experience after her tenure at the university.
Time will tell how much evolving her already famous technique
undergoes -- a distinctive style that has generated critical
attention, both good and bad, for being a dead ringer for Pablo
Picasso’s cubism.
For Picasso, the technique was years in the making; a conscious
choice to forge a new road and abandon the conventions of his
stylistic predecessors.
For Nechita, it was a matter of instinct.
As a child, people would ask Nechita why she painted the way she
did, going as far as to ask her whether there was something wrong
with her eyesight.
“That used to make me mad,” Nechita said. “I would just have to
tell people, ‘I don’t feel as you may feel.’ I don’t know why I paint
this way, I don’t know how I do it. It’s something that just
happens.”
Picture an 8-year-old girl in a studio with her paints and a
canvas. A self-described “teacher’s pet” and “super, super nerd”
locking herself away in a room, needing to be alone with her work.
“I thought everyone should understand,” Nechita said. “I used to
freak out when I was bothered. Painting, it’s such a sensual moment,
an amazing emotion. I become one with my medium and there’s nothing
else.”
Her love for painting grew, and while other artists her age are
clamoring to be on MTV or featured in the next teen flick, Nechita
has found creative freedom working in a medium that is hundreds of
years old.
“I still believe painting can capture delicate, sensitive
sentiments that no other medium can,” Nechita said. “There is a
connection between the viewer and artwork that doesn’t exist anywhere
else.”
‘IDOL’ CHATTER
Nechita has been in the public eye for most of her life and
credits her parents, Niki and Viorica, for helping her develop her
strong sense of love and respect.
“I know my parents would do anything for me and I would do
anything for them. It’s so important for parents to establish a firm
friendship with their children. That’s what my parents have given
me.”
Nechita’s 9-year-old brother Maximillian, who she calls “the love
of my life,” rounds out her family. She adores the boy -- he’s the
only person allowed in her studio while she works -- and he serves as
a means of escaping the collegiate pressures of class work and paper
deadlines.
Maximillian recently pulled his big sister away from her studies
to partake in his latest obsession, “American Idol.”
“I nearly thought I was going to die,” Nechita said about her
impromptu dose of reality television. “My motto is if you have a
dream do it. I can honestly see myself in some of those rejected
people, trying to live out their dream.
“But then again, these people can’t sing.”
GIVE ME TIME AND GIVE ME SPACE
The maturity of Nechita’s artwork and the success of her career
can sometimes cause people to forget that she’s still a teenager -- a
young woman who rocks out to Coldplay and Radiohead in her car, a
“movie freak” with her Blockbuster card always ready to go and
someone who’s gets a good laugh out of an episode of “The O.C.”
Most artists spend a lifetime trying to achieve what Nechita has
already experienced, yet she is still evolving. She’s experimenting
with glass and in sculpture, and plans to study in Europe regularly
over the course of her college career.
When talking about the various challenges she experiences in her
everyday life and what may be ahead in her future, Nechita sounds
wise beyond her years:
“I have nothing to complain about. Everything’s wonderful, even if
it’s not. It’s all about picking the pieces up and putting them back
together -- that’s what strength is, walking around and being tough.
That’s what it’s all about.”
Then, she pauses.
“I love waffles.” Another pause, then a laugh.
“I know, I’m very random.”
Not random, just energetic and 18.
* JOSE J. SANTOS is the art director and news desk chief. He can
be reached at [email protected].
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