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  • Work by Picasso, Miró, others at MWC

    The Free Lance-Star, VA
    March 18 2004

    Work by Picasso, Miró, others at MWC


    Picassos, Pissarros and Mirós are included in the art collection of
    Tia and Robert Cadow. The paintings can be seen at the Ridderhof
    Martin Gallery on the MWC campus.

    By ADELE UPHAUS
    THE FREE LANCE-STAR

    Alexandra Nechita is just 18, but she's already one of the most
    recognized names in the art world.

    The Romanian-born child prodigy started drawing with pen and ink when
    she was 2 years old and held her first show at the age of 8.

    Today, she's known as the "petite Picasso," and her colorful cubist
    paintings, which often go to benefit organizations like the September
    11th Fund and the Special Olympics, sell out to masses of art
    collectors.

    Fredericksburg residents can see two of Nechita's original paintings
    at the Ridderhof Martin Gallery on the MWC campus in a show opening
    tonight. They also can see a work by her inspiration--Pablo Picasso
    himself--and art by other 20th century masters such as Joan Miró,
    Camille Pissarro and Marc Chagall.

    "Contemporary Masters: Selected Works From a Private Collection" will
    be on display at the gallery through June 6, with an opening
    reception tonight.

    The collection belongs to local couple Robert and Tia Cadow, who own
    Fredericksburg Supplies and Rentals near Four-Mile Fork. The show
    represents a wide variety of 20th-century genres, from impressionism
    to abstraction. Tying it together are themes of color, vitality and
    romance.

    "They're all very different styles--it's a nice mix," Tia Cadow said
    of the collection.

    Not only is the collection varied by style, it's also a veritable
    United Nations of artists. There's the Spanish Picasso and Miró, the
    French Pissarro and the Russian Chagal. There's work by the
    Armenian-born Yuroz, whose bright, abstract paintings depict quietly
    intimate moments between couples, and vigorous character studies by
    Italian Aldo Luongo, who dedicated a painting of a red-haired
    ballerina to Tia Cadow.

    The collection also includes cartoonist Al Hirschfeld and Iranian
    Abrishami Hessam, whose color-washed canvases look like something
    from a daydream.

    Cadow said she and her husband purchased their first piece of art in
    1990--a seriograph, or limited edition print, by Linnea Pergola,
    depicting a bustling Times Square cityscape. After that, she was
    hooked.

    "It just started," she said.

    She doesn't consider herself or her husband "into art" in the sense
    that they feel they need to buy a certain painting in order to
    complete their collection. Rather, she purchases art when it appeals
    to her.

    "We buy them because we like them, not because of value. They're
    fun," Cadow said.

    For the most part, the works that appeal to her are bold, lively and
    colorful, such as "Friendship" by Aldo Luongo, which depicts three
    women with champagne glasses raised high, and a street scene by
    Pissarro, which the couple acquired from London only two weeks ago.

    "It shows all the street painters and it's very colorful," she said.

    The Cadows also own several works by local artists and are fans of
    the local art scene.

    The collection has never been exhibited before, Cadow said. The
    exhibition came about because the college is their client and Cadow
    offered to lend the paintings to the gallery.

    "I'm excited about it," she said. "I'm excited to see people's
    reactions. The paintings are fun to look at. They're just very
    colorful."
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