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FRIDAKAHLO.ORG
TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain. THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit sky MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. THE BROKEN COLUMN, 1944 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Broken Column, 1944 by Frida Kahlo. Pain and suffering is a constant topic in Frida's painting. In this painting, The Broken Column, Frida expressed her anguish and suffering in the most straightforward and horrifying way. The nails are stuck into her face and whole body. A split in her torso looks like an earthquake fissure. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. THE SUICIDE OF DOROTHY HALE, 1938 This painting is one of Frida's most shocking and controversial painting, which depicted the details of every step of Hale's suicide. It shows Hale standing on the balcony, falling to her death while also lying on the bloody pavement below. Frida painted it in the style of an "ex-voto (retablo)". FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - 10 INTERESTING FRIDA KAHLO FACTS THAT MAY SURPRISE YOUSEE MORE ONFRIDAKAHLO.ORG
TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain. THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit sky MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. THE BROKEN COLUMN, 1944 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Broken Column, 1944 by Frida Kahlo. Pain and suffering is a constant topic in Frida's painting. In this painting, The Broken Column, Frida expressed her anguish and suffering in the most straightforward and horrifying way. The nails are stuck into her face and whole body. A split in her torso looks like an earthquake fissure. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. THE SUICIDE OF DOROTHY HALE, 1938 This painting is one of Frida's most shocking and controversial painting, which depicted the details of every step of Hale's suicide. It shows Hale standing on the balcony, falling to her death while also lying on the bloody pavement below. Frida painted it in the style of an "ex-voto (retablo)". 10 INTERESTING FRIDA KAHLO FACTS THAT MAY SURPRISE YOU She wanted her birth to coincide with the beginning of the Mexican Revolution. Frida Kahlo was born on July 6, 1907 in Coyoacan, Mexico City, but she often told people she was born in 1910, 3 years after her actual birth, so that people would directly associate her with the Mexican Revolution that began in 1910.LIVING NATURE
Living nature - by Frida Kahlo. Frida painted still lifes for lots of people when she was in her 50s. She was in such a pain at that time and cannot get out of the house or even her bed. In this painting, the sky is separated into day and night, and both sun and moon are presenta
THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit sky DIEGO AND I, 1949 BY FRIDA KAHLO Diego and I, 1949 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Diego and I, shows Frida's great anguish over Diego Rivera. When he had an affair with Maria Felix almost divorced Frida. Maria Felix was a beautiful film star and as well an intimate friend of Frida's. Even though Frida was trying to joke about this affair, as VIVA LA VIDA, WATERMELONS Viva la Vida, Watermelons is the last painting that Frida Kahlo did. A vibrant conclusion to the short life of Frida Kahlo, Viva la Vida, Watermelons features rich color contrasts, curves and angles, and a final message from the artist herself. Kahlo put the finishing touches on her watermelon-themed painting just a few days before her death in1954.
WITHOUT HOPE, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO This painting was painted in the year of 1945 when Frida Kahlo was forced to be fed by the prescription of her doctor. In the back of this painting Frida Kahlo wrote down the following explanation: Not the least hope remains to meEverything move in time with what the belly contains. ”. MY DRESS HANGS THERE, 1933 BY FRIDA KAHLO My Dress Hangs There, 1933 by Frida Kahlo. After more than three years of staying in America, Frida started wanting to go back to Mexico desperately. But her husband, Diego Rivera, was enjoying the fame and popularity he got from this country and didn't want to THE SUICIDE OF DOROTHY HALE, 1938 This painting is one of Frida's most shocking and controversial painting, which depicted the details of every step of Hale's suicide. It shows Hale standing on the balcony, falling to her death while also lying on the bloody pavement below. Frida painted it in the style of an "ex-voto (retablo)". GIRL WITH DEATH MASK, 1938 Girl with Death Mask, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In 1938 Frida painted two similar paintings with the same subject. This painting depicted a little girl, which is believed to be Frida herself at the age of four, was wearing a skull mask. This kind of mask is a tradition at the annual Mexican festival"Day of the Dead
FULANG CHANG AND I, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Fulang Chang and I, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Fulang-Chang and I, Frida Kahlo painted herself with one of her pet monkeys. Lots of people believe the monkey represents the surrogate of the unborn children she and Diego Rivera cannot conceive. This painting was first displayed at Julien Levy Gallery in New York in1938, which is the
FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain. THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit sky MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. WITHOUT HOPE, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO This painting was painted in the year of 1945 when Frida Kahlo was forced to be fed by the prescription of her doctor. In the back of this painting Frida Kahlo wrote down the following explanation: Not the least hope remains to meEverything move in time with what the belly contains. ”. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. THE SUICIDE OF DOROTHY HALE, 1938 This painting is one of Frida's most shocking and controversial painting, which depicted the details of every step of Hale's suicide. It shows Hale standing on the balcony, falling to her death while also lying on the bloody pavement below. Frida painted it in the style of an "ex-voto (retablo)". GIRL WITH DEATH MASK, 1938 Girl with Death Mask, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In 1938 Frida painted two similar paintings with the same subject. This painting depicted a little girl, which is believed to be Frida herself at the age of four, was wearing a skull mask. This kind of mask is a tradition at the annual Mexican festival"Day of the Dead
FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain. THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit sky MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. WITHOUT HOPE, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO This painting was painted in the year of 1945 when Frida Kahlo was forced to be fed by the prescription of her doctor. In the back of this painting Frida Kahlo wrote down the following explanation: Not the least hope remains to meEverything move in time with what the belly contains. ”. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. THE SUICIDE OF DOROTHY HALE, 1938 This painting is one of Frida's most shocking and controversial painting, which depicted the details of every step of Hale's suicide. It shows Hale standing on the balcony, falling to her death while also lying on the bloody pavement below. Frida painted it in the style of an "ex-voto (retablo)". GIRL WITH DEATH MASK, 1938 Girl with Death Mask, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In 1938 Frida painted two similar paintings with the same subject. This painting depicted a little girl, which is believed to be Frida herself at the age of four, was wearing a skull mask. This kind of mask is a tradition at the annual Mexican festival"Day of the Dead
100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLO Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - by Frida Kahlo. THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit skyLIVING NATURE
Living nature - by Frida Kahlo. Frida painted still lifes for lots of people when she was in her 50s. She was in such a pain at that time and cannot get out of the house or even her bed. In this painting, the sky is separated into day and night, and both sun and moon are presenta
MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes DIEGO AND I, 1949 BY FRIDA KAHLO Diego and I, 1949 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Diego and I, shows Frida's great anguish over Diego Rivera. When he had an affair with Maria Felix almost divorced Frida. Maria Felix was a beautiful film star and as well an intimate friend of Frida's. Even though Frida was trying to joke about this affair, as VIVA LA VIDA, WATERMELONS Viva la Vida, Watermelons is the last painting that Frida Kahlo did. A vibrant conclusion to the short life of Frida Kahlo, Viva la Vida, Watermelons features rich color contrasts, curves and angles, and a final message from the artist herself. Kahlo put the finishing touches on her watermelon-themed painting just a few days before her death in1954.
THE BROKEN COLUMN, 1944 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Broken Column, 1944 by Frida Kahlo. Pain and suffering is a constant topic in Frida's painting. In this painting, The Broken Column, Frida expressed her anguish and suffering in the most straightforward and horrifying way. The nails are stuck into her face and whole body. A split in her torso looks like an earthquake fissure. ME AND MY PARROT, 1941 BY FRIDA KAHLO Me and My Parrot, 1941 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. Frida Kahlo remarried to Diego Rivera in December of 1940 after they separated for a few years. After this Frida's life seems to be settled down to some extent of calmer routine. They remained to FULANG CHANG AND I, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Fulang Chang and I, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Fulang-Chang and I, Frida Kahlo painted herself with one of her pet monkeys. Lots of people believe the monkey represents the surrogate of the unborn children she and Diego Rivera cannot conceive. This painting was first displayed at Julien Levy Gallery in New York in1938, which is the
SELF-PORTRAIT WITH MONKEY, 1938 BY FRIDA KAHLO Monkey is a symbol of lust in Mexican mythology. But in this painting, Self Portrait with a Monkey, it was depicted as a creature with his own soul.He is tender and gentle and puts his arm around Frida's neck. It seems the money wants to protect her. FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain. THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken GIRL WITH DEATH MASK, 1938 Girl with Death Mask, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In 1938 Frida painted two similar paintings with the same subject. This painting depicted a little girl, which is believed to be Frida herself at the age of four, was wearing a skull mask. This kind of mask is a tradition at the annual Mexican festival"Day of the Dead
MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes THE BROKEN COLUMN, 1944 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Broken Column, 1944 by Frida Kahlo. Pain and suffering is a constant topic in Frida's painting. In this painting, The Broken Column, Frida expressed her anguish and suffering in the most straightforward and horrifying way. The nails are stuck into her face and whole body. A split in her torso looks like an earthquake fissure. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. WITHOUT HOPE, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO This painting was painted in the year of 1945 when Frida Kahlo was forced to be fed by the prescription of her doctor. In the back of this painting Frida Kahlo wrote down the following explanation: Not the least hope remains to meEverything move in time with what the belly contains. ”. FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain. THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken GIRL WITH DEATH MASK, 1938 Girl with Death Mask, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In 1938 Frida painted two similar paintings with the same subject. This painting depicted a little girl, which is believed to be Frida herself at the age of four, was wearing a skull mask. This kind of mask is a tradition at the annual Mexican festival"Day of the Dead
MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes THE BROKEN COLUMN, 1944 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Broken Column, 1944 by Frida Kahlo. Pain and suffering is a constant topic in Frida's painting. In this painting, The Broken Column, Frida expressed her anguish and suffering in the most straightforward and horrifying way. The nails are stuck into her face and whole body. A split in her torso looks like an earthquake fissure. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. WITHOUT HOPE, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO This painting was painted in the year of 1945 when Frida Kahlo was forced to be fed by the prescription of her doctor. In the back of this painting Frida Kahlo wrote down the following explanation: Not the least hope remains to meEverything move in time with what the belly contains. ”.LIVING NATURE
Living nature - by Frida Kahlo. Frida painted still lifes for lots of people when she was in her 50s. She was in such a pain at that time and cannot get out of the house or even her bed. In this painting, the sky is separated into day and night, and both sun and moon are presenta
THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit sky MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes THE BROKEN COLUMN, 1944 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Broken Column, 1944 by Frida Kahlo. Pain and suffering is a constant topic in Frida's painting. In this painting, The Broken Column, Frida expressed her anguish and suffering in the most straightforward and horrifying way. The nails are stuck into her face and whole body. A split in her torso looks like an earthquake fissure. WITHOUT HOPE, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO This painting was painted in the year of 1945 when Frida Kahlo was forced to be fed by the prescription of her doctor. In the back of this painting Frida Kahlo wrote down the following explanation: Not the least hope remains to meEverything move in time with what the belly contains. ”. VIVA LA VIDA, WATERMELONS Viva la Vida, Watermelons is the last painting that Frida Kahlo did. A vibrant conclusion to the short life of Frida Kahlo, Viva la Vida, Watermelons features rich color contrasts, curves and angles, and a final message from the artist herself. Kahlo put the finishing touches on her watermelon-themed painting just a few days before her death in1954.
ME AND MY PARROT, 1941 BY FRIDA KAHLO Me and My Parrot, 1941 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. Frida Kahlo remarried to Diego Rivera in December of 1940 after they separated for a few years. After this Frida's life seems to be settled down to some extent of calmer routine. They remained to WHAT THE WATER GAVE ME, 1938 BY FRIDA KAHLO In the water, the reflections are her images of life and death, happiness and sadness, comfort and pain, as well as her past and present. In the middle of these images lying Frida herself. She seems drowned in her imagination and blood was coming out from her mouth. What the Water Gave Me was signed and dated as THE DREAM (THE BED), 1940 In this painting, Dream of The Bed, painted in the year of 1940, Frida expressed her feeling and interception of death. In real life, Frida has a skeleton on the canopy of her bed. Her husband, Diego Rivera called the Juda Frida's lover but Frida said it's just an amusing reminder of people's mortality. SELF-PORTRAIT WITH MONKEY, 1938 BY FRIDA KAHLO Monkey is a symbol of lust in Mexican mythology. But in this painting, Self Portrait with a Monkey, it was depicted as a creature with his own soul.He is tender and gentle and puts his arm around Frida's neck. It seems the money wants to protect her. FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - 10 INTERESTING FRIDA KAHLO FACTS THAT MAY SURPRISE YOUSEE MORE ONFRIDAKAHLO.ORG
FRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain.LIVING NATURE
Living nature - by Frida Kahlo. Frida painted still lifes for lots of people when she was in her 50s. She was in such a pain at that time and cannot get out of the house or even her bed. In this painting, the sky is separated into day and night, and both sun and moon are presenta
THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. FRIDA AND CESAREAN OPERATION, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Frida and Cesarean Operation, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In early May of 1932, while Frida was in Detroit, she got pregnant again. Realizing that Diego didn't any children and knowing that there were some risks with her being carrying the pregnancy, Frida chose to stop the MY DRESS HANGS THERE, 1933 BY FRIDA KAHLO My Dress Hangs There, 1933 by Frida Kahlo. After more than three years of staying in America, Frida started wanting to go back to Mexico desperately. But her husband, Diego Rivera, was enjoying the fame and popularity he got from this country and didn't want to FRIDA AND CESAREAN OPERATION, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Frida and Cesarean Operation, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In early May of 1932, while Frida was in Detroit, she got pregnant again. Realizing that Diego didn't any children and knowing that there were some risks with her being carrying the pregnancy, Frida chose to stop the VIVA LA VIDA, WATERMELONS Viva la Vida, Watermelons is the last painting that Frida Kahlo did. A vibrant conclusion to the short life of Frida Kahlo, Viva la Vida, Watermelons features rich color contrasts, curves and angles, and a final message from the artist herself. Kahlo put the finishing touches on her watermelon-themed painting just a few days before her death in1954.
WITHOUT HOPE, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO This painting was painted in the year of 1945 when Frida Kahlo was forced to be fed by the prescription of her doctor. In the back of this painting Frida Kahlo wrote down the following explanation: Not the least hope remains to meEverything move in time with what the belly contains. ”. MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes THE DREAM (THE BED), 1940 In this painting, Dream of The Bed, painted in the year of 1940, Frida expressed her feeling and interception of death. In real life, Frida has a skeleton on the canopy of her bed. Her husband, Diego Rivera called the Juda Frida's lover but Frida said it's just an amusing reminder of people's mortality. WHAT THE WATER GAVE ME, 1938 BY FRIDA KAHLO In the water, the reflections are her images of life and death, happiness and sadness, comfort and pain, as well as her past and present. In the middle of these images lying Frida herself. She seems drowned in her imagination and blood was coming out from her mouth. What the Water Gave Me was signed and dated asPITAHAYAS, 1938
Pitahayas, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Frida Kahlo's painting is a still life of five pitahayas. The pitahaya is a desert fruit with a melon-like taste that grows on rocks or in thickets. It is ovoid with a thick yellow skin that swells with excrescences and bulges. The inside is a mass of dense, translucent white flesh that contains manysmall
MY GRANDPARENTS MY PARENTS AND ME, 1936 BY FRIDA KAHLO In the painting, My Grandparents My Parents and Me, Frida Kahlo is a naked little girl holding the loop of red ribbon that is the representation of her bloodline.The ribbon supports her family tree as effortlessly as though it were the string of balloons. You may wonder why the ribbon has a loop and the loop was put at the exact place where her parents' bodies are overlapped. SELF-PORTRAIT DEDICATED TO LEON TROTSKY, 1937 It is a self-portrait that Frida painted as a gift for Leon Trotsky on his birthday. The paper she is holding dedicates the portrait to Leon: "To Leon Trotsky, with all my love, I dedicate this painting on 7th November 1937. Frida Kahlo in Saint Angel, Mexico". The portrait is painted with warm and soft colors, and Frida looks beautiful ITZCUINTLI DOG WITH ME, 1938 Itzcuintli Dog with Me, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Frida was not able to bear children because of the bus accident that happened to her in the year of 1925. As a substitute for kids, she collected many dolls and pets like monkeys, dogs, birds, and even ad deer. In this FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - 10 INTERESTING FRIDA KAHLO FACTS THAT MAY SURPRISE YOUSEE MORE ONFRIDAKAHLO.ORG
TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain.FRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes MY DRESS HANGS THERE, 1933 BY FRIDA KAHLO My Dress Hangs There, 1933 by Frida Kahlo. After more than three years of staying in America, Frida started wanting to go back to Mexico desperately. But her husband, Diego Rivera, was enjoying the fame and popularity he got from this country and didn't want to THE BROKEN COLUMN, 1944 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Broken Column, 1944 by Frida Kahlo. Pain and suffering is a constant topic in Frida's painting. In this painting, The Broken Column, Frida expressed her anguish and suffering in the most straightforward and horrifying way. The nails are stuck into her face and whole body. A split in her torso looks like an earthquake fissure. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - 10 INTERESTING FRIDA KAHLO FACTS THAT MAY SURPRISE YOUSEE MORE ONFRIDAKAHLO.ORG
TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain.FRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes MY DRESS HANGS THERE, 1933 BY FRIDA KAHLO My Dress Hangs There, 1933 by Frida Kahlo. After more than three years of staying in America, Frida started wanting to go back to Mexico desperately. But her husband, Diego Rivera, was enjoying the fame and popularity he got from this country and didn't want to THE BROKEN COLUMN, 1944 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Broken Column, 1944 by Frida Kahlo. Pain and suffering is a constant topic in Frida's painting. In this painting, The Broken Column, Frida expressed her anguish and suffering in the most straightforward and horrifying way. The nails are stuck into her face and whole body. A split in her torso looks like an earthquake fissure. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection.FRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit skyLIVING NATURE
Living nature - by Frida Kahlo. Frida painted still lifes for lots of people when she was in her 50s. She was in such a pain at that time and cannot get out of the house or even her bed. In this painting, the sky is separated into day and night, and both sun and moon are presenta
MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes DIEGO AND I, 1949 BY FRIDA KAHLO Diego and I, 1949 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Diego and I, shows Frida's great anguish over Diego Rivera. When he had an affair with Maria Felix almost divorced Frida. Maria Felix was a beautiful film star and as well an intimate friend of Frida's. Even though Frida was trying to joke about this affair, as ME AND MY PARROT, 1941 BY FRIDA KAHLO Me and My Parrot, 1941 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. Frida Kahlo remarried to Diego Rivera in December of 1940 after they separated for a few years. After this Frida's life seems to be settled down to some extent of calmer routine. They remained to MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. FRIDA AND CESAREAN OPERATION, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Frida and Cesarean Operation, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In early May of 1932, while Frida was in Detroit, she got pregnant again. Realizing that Diego didn't any children and knowing that there were some risks with her being carrying the pregnancy, Frida chose to stop the GIRL WITH DEATH MASK, 1938 Girl with Death Mask, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In 1938 Frida painted two similar paintings with the same subject. This painting depicted a little girl, which is believed to be Frida herself at the age of four, was wearing a skull mask. This kind of mask is a tradition at the annual Mexican festival"Day of the Dead
FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain. THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a brokenFRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives FRIDA KAHLO BIOGRAPHYSEE MORE ON FRIDAKAHLO.ORG 10 INTERESTING FRIDA KAHLO FACTS THAT MAY SURPRISE YOUSEE MORE ONFRIDAKAHLO.ORG
MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes MY DRESS HANGS THERE, 1933 BY FRIDA KAHLO My Dress Hangs There, 1933 by Frida Kahlo. After more than three years of staying in America, Frida started wanting to go back to Mexico desperately. But her husband, Diego Rivera, was enjoying the fame and popularity he got from this country and didn't want to DIEGO AND I, 1949 BY FRIDA KAHLO Diego and I, 1949 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Diego and I, shows Frida's great anguish over Diego Rivera. When he had an affair with Maria Felix almost divorced Frida. Maria Felix was a beautiful film star and as well an intimate friend of Frida's. Even though Frida was trying to joke about this affair, as FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - 10 INTERESTING FRIDA KAHLO FACTS THAT MAY SURPRISE YOUSEE MORE ONFRIDAKAHLO.ORG
TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain.FRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a broken MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes MY DRESS HANGS THERE, 1933 BY FRIDA KAHLO My Dress Hangs There, 1933 by Frida Kahlo. After more than three years of staying in America, Frida started wanting to go back to Mexico desperately. But her husband, Diego Rivera, was enjoying the fame and popularity he got from this country and didn't want to THE BROKEN COLUMN, 1944 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Broken Column, 1944 by Frida Kahlo. Pain and suffering is a constant topic in Frida's painting. In this painting, The Broken Column, Frida expressed her anguish and suffering in the most straightforward and horrifying way. The nails are stuck into her face and whole body. A split in her torso looks like an earthquake fissure. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection.FRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit skyLIVING NATURE
Living nature - by Frida Kahlo. Frida painted still lifes for lots of people when she was in her 50s. She was in such a pain at that time and cannot get out of the house or even her bed. In this painting, the sky is separated into day and night, and both sun and moon are presenta
MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes DIEGO AND I, 1949 BY FRIDA KAHLO Diego and I, 1949 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Diego and I, shows Frida's great anguish over Diego Rivera. When he had an affair with Maria Felix almost divorced Frida. Maria Felix was a beautiful film star and as well an intimate friend of Frida's. Even though Frida was trying to joke about this affair, as ME AND MY PARROT, 1941 BY FRIDA KAHLO Me and My Parrot, 1941 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. Frida Kahlo remarried to Diego Rivera in December of 1940 after they separated for a few years. After this Frida's life seems to be settled down to some extent of calmer routine. They remained to MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. FRIDA AND CESAREAN OPERATION, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Frida and Cesarean Operation, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In early May of 1932, while Frida was in Detroit, she got pregnant again. Realizing that Diego didn't any children and knowing that there were some risks with her being carrying the pregnancy, Frida chose to stop the GIRL WITH DEATH MASK, 1938 Girl with Death Mask, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In 1938 Frida painted two similar paintings with the same subject. This painting depicted a little girl, which is believed to be Frida herself at the age of four, was wearing a skull mask. This kind of mask is a tradition at the annual Mexican festival"Day of the Dead
FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain. THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a brokenFRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives FRIDA KAHLO BIOGRAPHYSEE MORE ON FRIDAKAHLO.ORG 10 INTERESTING FRIDA KAHLO FACTS THAT MAY SURPRISE YOUSEE MORE ONFRIDAKAHLO.ORG
MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes MY DRESS HANGS THERE, 1933 BY FRIDA KAHLO My Dress Hangs There, 1933 by Frida Kahlo. After more than three years of staying in America, Frida started wanting to go back to Mexico desperately. But her husband, Diego Rivera, was enjoying the fame and popularity he got from this country and didn't want to DIEGO AND I, 1949 BY FRIDA KAHLO Diego and I, 1949 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Diego and I, shows Frida's great anguish over Diego Rivera. When he had an affair with Maria Felix almost divorced Frida. Maria Felix was a beautiful film star and as well an intimate friend of Frida's. Even though Frida was trying to joke about this affair, as FRIDA KAHLO: 100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ARTMASTERPIECES OF FRIDA KAHLOVOICE OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLOPAINTINGS OF FRIDA KAHLO Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. 100 FAMOUS PAINTINGS BY FRIDA KAHLOCHRONOLOGY OF FRIDA KAHLOBIOGRAHPY OF FRIDA KAHLO100 PAINTINGS ANALYSIS, BIOGRAPHY, QUOTES, & ART Frida Kahlo's Paintings. The two fridas - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded deer - by Frida Kahlo. The wounded table - by Frida Kahlo. Thinking about Death - by Frida Kahlo. Tree of Hope Remain Strong - by Frida Kahlo. Me and My Parrots - by Frida Kahlo. The Bus - by Frida Kahlo. A Few Small Nips Passionately in Love - TREE OF HOPE, REMAIN STRONG, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO Tree of Hope, Remain Strong, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. After Frida returned to Mexico from the United States, she was staying in bed for a while and then wearing a steel corset for eight months. But her health condition has been worsening instead of improving. She got sharp pains in her spine and lost her appetite due to the long-lasting pain. THE TWO FRIDAS, 1939 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Two Fridas, 1939 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. This painting was completed shortly after her divorce with Diego Rivera. This portrait shows Frida's two different personalities. One is the traditional Frida in Tehuana costume, with a brokenFRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives FRIDA KAHLO BIOGRAPHYSEE MORE ON FRIDAKAHLO.ORG 10 INTERESTING FRIDA KAHLO FACTS THAT MAY SURPRISE YOUSEE MORE ONFRIDAKAHLO.ORG
MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes MY DRESS HANGS THERE, 1933 BY FRIDA KAHLO My Dress Hangs There, 1933 by Frida Kahlo. After more than three years of staying in America, Frida started wanting to go back to Mexico desperately. But her husband, Diego Rivera, was enjoying the fame and popularity he got from this country and didn't want to DIEGO AND I, 1949 BY FRIDA KAHLO Diego and I, 1949 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Diego and I, shows Frida's great anguish over Diego Rivera. When he had an affair with Maria Felix almost divorced Frida. Maria Felix was a beautiful film star and as well an intimate friend of Frida's. Even though Frida was trying to joke about this affair, asFRIDA KAHLO
Please note that www.FridaKahlo.org is a private website, unaffiliated with Frida Kahlo or her representatives THE WOUNDED DEER, 1946 BY FRIDA KAHLO The Wounded Deer, 1946 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Frida used a young deer with the head of herself and was fatally wounded by a bunch of arrows. The background is the forest with dead trees and broken branches, which implied the feeling of fear and desperation. Far away is the stormy, lightning-lit skyLIVING NATURE
Living nature - by Frida Kahlo. Frida painted still lifes for lots of people when she was in her 50s. She was in such a pain at that time and cannot get out of the house or even her bed. In this painting, the sky is separated into day and night, and both sun and moon are presenta
MEMORY, THE HEART, 1937 BY FRIDA KAHLO Memory, the Heart, 1937 by Frida Kahlo. In this self-portrait, Memory, the Heart 1937, Frida Kahlo expressed her misery and resentment over the affair that happened two years ago between Diego Rivera and Cristina. In this painting, her face has no expression but with all tears. She cropped her hair and was wearing the European-style clothes DIEGO AND I, 1949 BY FRIDA KAHLO Diego and I, 1949 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In this painting, Diego and I, shows Frida's great anguish over Diego Rivera. When he had an affair with Maria Felix almost divorced Frida. Maria Felix was a beautiful film star and as well an intimate friend of Frida's. Even though Frida was trying to joke about this affair, as ME AND MY PARROT, 1941 BY FRIDA KAHLO Me and My Parrot, 1941 by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. Frida Kahlo remarried to Diego Rivera in December of 1940 after they separated for a few years. After this Frida's life seems to be settled down to some extent of calmer routine. They remained to MOSES, 1945 BY FRIDA KAHLO Moses, 1945 by Frida Kahlo. This painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes and sometimes is called with the name of "Nucleus of Creation". But Frida Kahlo referred to as "Moses" in a written description of this painting. This painting was commissioned by Don Jose Domingo Lavin. HENRY FORD HOSPITAL, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In this painting, Frida depicts herself in Henry Ford Hospital, lying on the bed naked with blood and hemorrhage. As in Four Inhabitants of Mexico , this painting has a very intimate space. The body is twisted and the bed is tipped up and that adds the feelings of helplessness and disconnection. FRIDA AND CESAREAN OPERATION, 1932 BY FRIDA KAHLO Frida and Cesarean Operation, 1932 by Frida Kahlo. In early May of 1932, while Frida was in Detroit, she got pregnant again. Realizing that Diego didn't any children and knowing that there were some risks with her being carrying the pregnancy, Frida chose to stop the GIRL WITH DEATH MASK, 1938 Girl with Death Mask, 1938 - by Frida Kahlo. Courtesy of www.FridaKahlo.org. In 1938 Frida painted two similar paintings with the same subject. This painting depicted a little girl, which is believed to be Frida herself at the age of four, was wearing a skull mask. This kind of mask is a tradition at the annual Mexican festival"Day of the Dead
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* Masterpieces of Frida Kahlo * Self Portrait in a Velvet Dress, 1926* The Bus, 1929
* Two Women, 1929
* Frida and Diego Rivera, 1931* My Birth, 1932
* Self Portrait Along the Boarder Line Between Mexico and the UnitedStates
* Henry Ford Hospital, 1932 * My Dress Hangs There, 1933 * A Few Small Nips, 1935 * My Grandparents My Parents and Me, 1936 * My Nurse and I, 1937 * Memory, the Heart, 1937 * Fulang Chang and I, 1937 * Four Inhabitants of Mexico, 1938 * Self-portrait with Monkey, 1938 * What I Saw in the Water, 1938 * Two Nudes in the Forest, 1939 * The Two Fridas, 1939 * Self Portrait Dedicated to Dr Eloesser, 1940 * Self Portrait with Monkey, 1940 * The Wounded Table, 1940 * Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird, 1940 * Me and My Parrots, 1941* Roots, 1943
* Self Portrait as a Tehuana, 1943 * The Broken Column, 1944 * Without Hope, 1945* Moses, 1945
* The Wounded Deer, 1946 * Tree of Hope, 1946 * Self Portrait with Loose Hair, 1947 * Self Portrait, 1948 * The Love Embrace of the Universe, 1949* Diego and I, 1949
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FRIDA KAHLO AND HER PAINTINGS Mexican artist Frida Kahlo is remembered for her self-portraits, pain and passion, and bold, vibrant colors. She is celebrated in Mexico for her attention to Mexican and indigenous culture and by feminists for her depiction of the female experience and form. Kahlo, who suffered from polio as a child, nearly died in a bus accident as a teenager. She suffered multiple fractures of her spine, collarbone and ribs, a shattered pelvis, broken foot and dislocated shoulder. She began to focus heavily on painting while recovering in a body cast. In her lifetime, she had 30 operations. Life experience is a common theme in Kahlo's approximately 200 paintings, sketches and drawings. Her physical and emotional pain are depicted starkly on canvases, as is her turbulent relationship with her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera , who she married twice. Of her 143 paintings, 55 are self-portraits. The devastation to her body from the bus accident is shown in stark detail in The Broken Column . Kahlo is depicted nearly naked, split down the middle, with her spine presented as a broken decorative column. Her skin is dotted with nails. She is also fitted with a surgical brace. Kahlo's first self-portrait was Self-Portrait in a Velvet Dress in 1926. It was painted in the style of 19th Century Mexican portrait painters who themselves were greatly influenced by the European Renaissance masters. She also sometimes drew from the Mexican painters in her use of a background of tied-back drapes. Self-Portrait - Time Flies (1929), Portrait of a a Woman in White (1930) and Self-Portrait Dedicated to Leon Trotsky (1937) all bear this background. In her second-self portrait, "Time Flies," Kahlo uses a folk style and vibrant colors. She wears peasant clothing, and the red, white and green in the painting are the colors of the Mexican flag. During her life, self portrait is a subject that Frida Kahlo always returns to, as artists have always returned to beloved themes - Vincent van Gogh his Sun Flowers, Paul Cezanne
his Apples
,
and Claude Monet his Water Lilies.
FRIDA AND DIEGO: LOVE AND PAIN Kahlo and Rivera had a tumultuous relationship, marked by multiple affairs on both sides. Self-Portrait With Cropped Hair (1940), Kahlo is depicted in a man's suit, holding a pair of scissors, with her fallen hair around the chair in which she sits. This represents the times she would cut the hair Rivera loved when he had affairs. The 1937 painting Memory, the Heart , shows Kahlo's pain over her husband's affair with her younger sister Christina. A large broken heart at her feet shows the intensity of Kahlo's anguish. Frido and Diego divorced in 1939, but reunited a year later and remarried. The Two Fridas (1939) depicts Kahlo twice, shortly after the divorce. One Frida wears a costume from the Tehuana region of Mexico, representing the Frida that Diego loved. The other Frida wears a European dress as the woman who Diego betrayed and rejected. Later, she is back in Tehuana dress in Self-Portrait as a Tehuana (1943) and Self Portrait (1948). Pre-Columbian artifacts were common both in the Kahlo/Rivera home (Diego collected sculptures and idols, and Frido collected Jewelry) and in Kahlo's paintings. She wore jewelry from this period in "Self-Portrait -- Time Flies" (1926), Self-Portrait With Monkey (1938) and Self-Portrait With Braid (1941), among others. Other Pre-Columbian artifacts are found in The Four Inhabitants of Mexico City (1938), Girl With Death Mask (1938) and Self-Portrait With SmallMonkeys (1945).
> I paint self-portraits because I am so often alone, because I am the > person I know best."SURREAL OR REALIST?
Frida Kahlo participated in the "International Exhibition of Surrealism" in 1940 at the Galeria de Arte, Mexicano. There, she exhibited her two largest paintings: The Two Fridas and The Wounded Table (1940). Surrealist Andrew Breton considered Kahlo a surrealistic, a label Kahlo rejected, saying she just painted her reality. However, In 1945, when Don Jose Domingo Lavin asked Frida Kahlo to read the book Moses and Monotheismby Sigmund
Freud - whose psychoanalysis works Surrealism is based on - and paint her understanding and interpretation of this book. Frida Kahlo painted Moses , and this painting was recognized as second prize at the annual art exhibition in the Palacio de Bellas Artes. Kahlo did not sell many paintings in her lifetime, although she painted occasional portraits on commission. She had only one solo exhibition in Mexico in her lifetime, in 1953, just a year before her death at the age of 47. Today, her works sell for very high prices. In May 2006, Frida Kahlo self-portrait, Roots , was sold for $5.62 million at a Sotheby's auction in New York, sets a record as the most expensive Latin American work ever purchased at auction, and also makes Frida Kahlo one of the highest-selling woman in art. > My painting carries with it the message of pain." - Frida Kahlo Widely known for her Marxist leanings, Frida, along with Marxism Revolutionary Che Guevara and a small band of contemporary figures, has become a countercultural symbol of 20th century, and created a legacy in paint that continue to inspire the imagination and mind. Born in 1907, dead at 47, Frida Kahlo achieved celebrity even in her brief lifetime that extended far beyond Mexico's borders, although nothing like the cult status that would eventually make her the mother of the selfie, her indelible image recognizableeverywhere.
Photo of Frida Kahlo Blue House At the Frida Kahlo Museum in Mexico City, her personal belongings are on display throughout the house, as if she still lived there. Kahlo was born and grew up in this building, whose cobalt walls gave way to the nickname of the Blue House. She lived there with her husband for some years, and she died there. The facility is the most popular museum in the Coyoacan neighborhood and among the most visited inMexico City.
FRIDA KAHLO'S MASTERPIECES*
The Broken Column
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The Two Fridas
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Me and My Parrots
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Roots
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Frida and Diego Rivera*
What the Water Gave Me*
The Wounded Table
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The Wounded Deer
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Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird*
Diego and I
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My Dress Hangs There*
Self Portrait with Monkey*
Self Portrait as a Tehuana*
Self Portrait in Velvet Dress*
Tree of Hope Remain Strong*
Fulang Chang and I
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Without Hope
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Self Portrait with Monkey*
My Grandparents My Parents and Me*
The Broken Column
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The Two Fridas
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Me and My Parrots
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Roots
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Frida and Diego Rivera*
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