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Retrato de una niña: Oil on canvas, 118.1 x 80 cm Frida Kahlo Museum, Coyoacán, Mexico 1929 Portrait of a Girl with Ribbon Around her Waist: Retrato de una niña con un lazo en la cintura: Oil on canvas, dimensions unknown Unknown 1929 Portrait of Isolda Pinedo Kahlo: Retrato de Isolda Pinedo Kahlo: Oil on canvas, 65.5 x 44 cm
The Alfredo Guati Rojo National Watercolor Museum (Museo Nacional de Acuarela Alfredo Guati Rojo) was the first museum in the world dedicated specifically to watercolor painting. It is located in the Coyoacán borough of Mexico City , in a former private house which was donated to the museum by the city government.
The Galería de Arte Mexicano (GAM) was founded by Carolina in 1935 and directed by Inés Amor, her sister from 1936 until the 80's, in Mexico City and has been the first gallery of Mexican art. The gallery building was the first building in Mexico of Andrés Casillas de Alba .
Sebastián López de Arteaga (1610–1652) [4] Alonso López de Herrera (c. 1585-ca. 1675) [4] Andrés López (active between 1763 and 1811) [4] José Joaquín Magón, produced two sets of 18th c. casta paintings; Luis de Mena [46] José de Mora (active in the first half of the 18th century) [4] Juan Patricio Morlete Ruiz (1713–1772) [4]
The museum consists of ten rooms. On the ground floor is a room that contains some of Kahlo's mostly minor works such as Frida y la cesárea, 1907–1954, Retrato de familia, 1934, Ruina, 1947, Retrato de Guillermo Kahlo, 1952, El marxismo dará salud, 1954 (showing Frida throwing away her crutches), with a watercolor Diario de Frida in the center.
The History of the Mexicans as Told by Their Paintings (Spanish: Historia de los Mexicanos por sus pinturas) is a Spanish language, post-conquest codex written in the 1530s. This manuscript was likely composed by Father Andrés de Olmos, an early Franciscan friar. It is presumed to be based upon one or more indigenous pictorial codices.
View of the National Watercolor Museum of Mexico, founded by Guati Rojo. Alfredo Guati Rojo Cárdenas (December 1, 1918 – June 10, 2003) was a 20th-century Mexican artist who worked to restore the reputation of watercolor painting as a true art form.
My Dress Hangs There (1933) is an oil painting and collage by Mexican artist Frida Kahlo.. Kahlo began this painting while staying in New York City with her husband, Diego Rivera, and completed it after the couple returned to their home in Mexico City. [1]