Aelita Andre -- I wanna have that much fun when I paint!

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4-year-old Aelita Andre gets her own NY art show, sells paintings for $27K on Shine

4-year-old Aelita Andre gets her own NY art show, sells paintings for $27K

by Lylah M. Alphonse, Senior Editor, Manage Your Life, on Wed Jun 8, 2011 12:24pm PDT
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Artist Aelita Andre at work in her studio. (Photo: Screengrab/YouTube)
It's amazing what a little kid can do with colored canvases, glue, pipe-cleaners, pompoms, plenty of paint—and the understanding that she won't get in trouble if she makes an enormous mess. The question is: Is she just playing, or deliberately creating art?

Aelita Andre's parents, both artists, are certain that their daughter is a bona fide Abstract Expressionist painter. The Australian girl has been crawling around on canvases since she was about 9 months old, according to her dad Michael Andre, and she made her first piece of authentic art just a few months later. Now, at the ripe old age of 4, she's got her own show in New York, "The Prodigy of Color" at the Agora Gallery in Chelsea. And she just sold three of her paintings for a cool $27,000.



On the one hand, her work seems like joyful play of any random 4-year-old. ("Blue! Yay, Blue!" she exclaims in a video, gleefully getting as much paint on herself as she does on her canvases.) But her parents and some art critics insist that the preschooler is "a fully mature artist" working with single-minded dedication to her art. Decide for yourself:



Angela Di Bello, the gallery's director, chose Aelita's artwork without knowing the little girl's age. "I saw great colors, great movement, great composition and very playful, and I thought, 'This is fantastic. Who is this person?' Only to find out, she's a child," Di Bello told NBC New York. The 24 paintings on exhibit at the Agora Gallery are priced from $4,400 to $10,000 each. In 2009, one of her paintings (created when she was just 2 years old) sold for $24,000 during a Hong Kong exhibition.

"Every parent thinks their child is gifted, and this is why we thought we really had to go and look for professional advice," her mother, Russian artist Nikka Kalashnikova, said.

Thanks to Aelita, the art world may be experiencing a bit of deja vu. In 2005, then 4-year-old Marla Olmstead was heralded as the next Jackson Pollock; her abstract paintings brought in more than $300,000 in just a few months. She became the subject of a 2007 documentary, "My Kid Could Paint That," which questioned whether Marla was really creating the pricy paintings herself.

Aelita is facing a similar skepticism, even if she doesn't know it yet. "We took her to MoMA yesterday," her mother told the New York Post this week. "And she was so upset that we were taking her to see other artists' work instead of going to her own exhibition."

What do you think? Cool, yes. But is it genius? Or just a kid who really likes to play with paint?

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QI4WPuudERo&feature=player_embedded]YouTube - ‪Four-year old art prodigy exhibits solo show in New York‬‏[/ame]

YouTube - ‪Abstract artist Aelita Andre‬‏
 
Of course my question is, "How many other kids might be able and willing to paint like that if they if they had access to the paint and were encouraged?"

Most parents I've met would not allow the kid near paints like that and if she got into them would give her a yelling to about staying out of things that did not belong to her and informed she had made one horrible mess for mommy to clean up.

And if a parent did allow their child access to paint I can conceive of them being brought up on charges of child endangerment for allowing her to play with toxic substances.

The last question in the article is,

"What do you think? Cool, yes. But is it genius? Or just a kid who really likes to play with paint?"

To which I reply, "Is there a difference? And if there were would it matter?"
 
Better than a lot of the crap I've seen at the Tate Modern and MOMA.
 
Of course my question is, "How many other kids might be able and willing to paint like that if they if they had access to the paint and were encouraged?"

Most parents I've met would not allow the kid near paints like that and if she got into them would give her a yelling to about staying out of things that did not belong to her and informed she had made one horrible mess for mommy to clean up.

And if a parent did allow their child access to paint I can conceive of them being brought up on charges of child endangerment for allowing her to play with toxic substances.

The last question in the article is,

"What do you think? Cool, yes. But is it genius? Or just a kid who really likes to play with paint?"

To which I reply, "Is there a difference? And if there were would it matter?"

We live in a society that stifles the natural creativity of children.
 
All children are genius!!

I know a mum who did the same here in Italy, too. Plus, her child is deaf :D
She also wrote a book on her experience with her kid's deafness, she helped me a lot in my journey... She pointed me to the HAs manufacturer where we are going now.

Her kid's works were beautiful, too, and he was only 2 at the time.
 
Pretty sure when I was that age, I hid behind the couch with some paint and made a masterpiece like those on our living room wall...

My mother wasn't nearly that pleased.
 
We live in a society that stifles the natural creativity of children.

I never felt comfortable doing creative work around my parents because it tends to create a mess for my parents and they like to keep things spotless.

I have always liked to create though.
 
I never felt comfortable doing creative work around my parents because it tends to create a mess for my parents and they like to keep things spotless.

I have always liked to create though.

That is so common.
 
All children are genius!!

I know a mum who did the same here in Italy, too. Plus, her child is deaf :D
She also wrote a book on her experience with her kid's deafness, she helped me a lot in my journey... She pointed me to the HAs manufacturer where we are going now.

Her kid's works were beautiful, too, and he was only 2 at the time.

You have chosen a wonderful person to serve as your mentor! I truly love your open mindedness and creativity in your thought.
 
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