Women and art - Frida Kahlo – Venderequadri Skip to content
Le donne e l'arte -  Frida Kahlo

Women and art - Frida Kahlo

Frida Kahlo 1907 - 1954 in Coyocán, Mexico

Frida Kahlo succeeded in creating a universally understandable visual language that combines naive art, realism, and surrealism. The oeuvre of this internationally renowned Mexican artist, born in 1907, includes over 200 paintings, mostly small-format self-portraits. These, like her still lifes and animal portraits, reveal remarkable expressive power and scrupulous attention to detail. Her works are often a harrowing testimony to her physical and mental suffering and reveal a disconcerting immediacy that makes them unforgettable. As a child, Frida Kahlo was bedridden for nine months due to polio, which left her with a severe foot deformity. At 18, she was involved in a car accident. The bus she was riding on collided with a tram, and Kahlo was impaled by a metal pole, fracturing her spine, pelvis, and legs. She remained hospitalized for a month and was then forced to wear a cast for another nine months. During her time in the hospital, Kahlo began to draw and paint—first the accident, then herself. Her first self-portrait, dating back to 1926, depicts her in a heroic pose. Many others followed, of which she later said she painted herself because, spending so much time alone, it was the subject she knew best. Her life was a constant struggle against death, a cruel fate to which she never resigned herself, but which was a hard test for her. Although Frida Kahlo was in contact with the Parisian surrealists (especially André Breton ) and although many critics considered her a surrealist, she stated, "I didn't know I was a surrealist until André Breton came to Mexico and told me." However, she never accepted this definition. "I never painted dreams. What I portrayed was my reality." Her paintings are internal images of external reality. Although her art is based on elements of her biography, the viewer can understand and interpret its themes, forms, patterns, and symbols. The irreducible candor and immediacy with which she faces her destiny in works that manage to make her anguish tangible move the viewer. And, despite the difference she speaks of, her images are always linked to broader, more universal motifs. (Ulrike Lehmann)
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