Collection
Frida Kahlo
Explore curated art prints selected for distinctive homes and considered interiors.
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Self-Portrait with Bonito - Frida Kahlo
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What the Water Gave Me - Frida Kahlo
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Unos Cuantos Piquetitos (A Few Small Nips) - Frida Kahlo
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Self-Portrait with Monkey - Frida Kahlo
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Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird - Frida Kahlo
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The Broken Column - Frida Kahlo
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Magnolias - Frida Kahlo
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Self-Portrait Along the Border Line Between Mexico and the United States - Frida Kahlo
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Portrait of Lupe Marín - Frida Kahlo
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Portrait of Marucha Lavin - Frida Kahlo
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Tunas (Still Life with Prickly Pear Fruit) - Frida Kahlo
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Still Life with Flag - Frida Kahlo
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Portrait of Lucha Maria, A Girl from Tehuacan - Frida Kahlo
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Girl with Death Mask (She Plays Alone) - Frida Kahlo
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Self-Portrait Dedicated to Leon Trotsky (Between the Curtains) - Frida Kahlo
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Portrait of Virginia (Little Girl) - Frida Kahlo
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Two Nudes in the Forest (The Earth Itself) - Frida Kahlo
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Portrait of Miguel N. Lira - Frida Kahlo
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Flower of Life (Flame Flower) - Frida Kahlo
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Weeping Coconuts - Frida Kahlo
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Self-Portrait (1941) - Frida Kahlo
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A Few Small Nips (Passionately in Love) - Frida Kahlo
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My Grandparents, My Parents and I - Frida Kahlo
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Artist Biography
Frida Kahlo
Kahlo started painting after a bus crash. She was eighteen, on her way home from school in Mexico City, when the bus was hit by a streetcar. A metal handrail pierced her pelvis. Her spinal column was broken in three places. Her collarbone, two ribs, and her right leg were fractured. She spent months in a full body cast, and her mother had a special easel built so she could paint lying down.
She had already been ill. Polio at six left her right leg thinner than her left, a disproportion she hid with long skirts. The bus accident compounded everything. She would have thirty-five operations over her lifetime. Pain was the background condition of her work, though reducing her paintings to autobiography misses what she actually did with the medium.
She married Diego Rivera in 1929. He was twenty years older, already Mexico's most famous muralist, and physically twice her size. Her parents called the marriage a union between an elephant and a dove. They divorced in 1939, remarried in 1940, and continued a relationship that was mutually unfaithful, politically intense, and artistically competitive. Rivera said she was the better painter. He may have been right.
Her paintings are small. Most are self-portraits. They use the visual language of Mexican folk art, ex-votos, and Aztec mythology, combined with a physical directness that makes Surrealism look polite. Andre Breton called her a Surrealist. She disagreed: 'I paint my own reality.' She was right about that too.
She died in 1954 at forty-seven. Her diary entry for the last day reads 'I hope the leaving is joyful and I hope never to return.'
She had already been ill. Polio at six left her right leg thinner than her left, a disproportion she hid with long skirts. The bus accident compounded everything. She would have thirty-five operations over her lifetime. Pain was the background condition of her work, though reducing her paintings to autobiography misses what she actually did with the medium.
She married Diego Rivera in 1929. He was twenty years older, already Mexico's most famous muralist, and physically twice her size. Her parents called the marriage a union between an elephant and a dove. They divorced in 1939, remarried in 1940, and continued a relationship that was mutually unfaithful, politically intense, and artistically competitive. Rivera said she was the better painter. He may have been right.
Her paintings are small. Most are self-portraits. They use the visual language of Mexican folk art, ex-votos, and Aztec mythology, combined with a physical directness that makes Surrealism look polite. Andre Breton called her a Surrealist. She disagreed: 'I paint my own reality.' She was right about that too.
She died in 1954 at forty-seven. Her diary entry for the last day reads 'I hope the leaving is joyful and I hope never to return.'
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