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Frida Kahlo, 1937, Memory, the Heart, oil on metal, 40 x 28 cm. Memory, the Heart, a 1937 painting by the Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, depicts the pain and anguish Kahlo experienced during and after an affair between her husband, artist Diego Rivera, and her sister, Cristina Kahlo. The painting is sometimes known by the title Recuerdo (Memory). [1]
4 January 2022–present: Frida Kahlo: The Life of an Icon at Barangaroo Reserve, Sydney. Audio visual exhibition created by the Frida Kahlo Corporation. [315] [316] 8 February–12 May 2019: Frida Kahlo: Appearances Can Be Deceiving at the Brooklyn Museum. This was the largest U.S. exhibition in a decade devoted solely to the painter and the ...
Frida and the Cesarean Operation: Frida y la operación cesárea: Oil on canvas, 73 x 62 cm Frida Kahlo Museum, Coyoacán, Mexico [3] 1932 Henry Ford Hospital: Henry Ford Hospital: Oil on metal, 30.5 x 38 cm Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City, Mexico [2] 1932 My Birth: Mi nacimiento: Oil on metal, 30.5 x 35 cm Private collection of Madonna: 1932
The new documentary film "FRIDA" by filmmaker Carla Gutiérrez uses the late Mexican artistic icon Frida Kahlo's illustrated diary and intimate correspondence to tell her story in her own words ...
Frida Kahlo used her own experiences to inform her art. In that spirit, Kahlo’s personal writings are used to help tell the story of her life in a new documentary, “Frida.” Filmmaker Carla ...
Frida Kahlo had no religious affiliation. Why, then, did the Mexican artist depict several religious symbols in the paintings she produced until her death on July 13, 1954? “Frida conveyed the ...
Diego et Frida is a biography of Mexican painters Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.It was originally published in French in 1993.. Diego et Frida occupies a special place in Le Clézio's creative output: it is the only story that the writer devotes completely to artists.
Kahlo painted The Two Fridas in 1939, the same year she divorced artist Diego Rivera, [1] although they remarried a year later. According to Kahlo's friend, Fernando Gamboa, the painting was inspired by two paintings that Kahlo saw earlier that year at the Louvre: Théodore Chassériau's The Two Sisters and the anonymous Gabrielle d'Estrées and One of Her Sisters.