Frida Kahlo | Biography, Paintings, & Facts - Britannica

Early years and bus accident

Key Dates in Frida Kahlo’s Life
Frida Kahlo
Frida KahloMexican painter Frida Kahlo, 1939, who is best known for her uncompromising and brilliantly colored self-portraits that deal with such themes as identity, the human body, and death.(more)
  • 1907: Born in Coyoacán, Mexico, on July 6.
  • 1913: Contracts polio, which leaves Kahlo with a slight limp.
  • 1925: Seriously injured while riding a bus home from school when it collides with a trolley. During her slow recovery Kahlo teaches herself to paint.
  • 1929: Marries fellow Mexican artist Diego Rivera.
  • 1930–33: Accompanies Rivera to the United States, where he has received commissions for murals in San Francisco, Detroit, and New York City, and loses several pregnancies during her time abroad.
  • 1938: Struggles to make money from her art but makes her first major sale when American actor Edward G. Robinson purchases four of her paintings. She also has her first solo exhibition, at the Julien Levy Gallery, New York City. While there, Vanity Fair editor Clare Boothe Luce commissions Kahlo to paint a tribute to actress Dorothy Hale, who had died by suicide earlier that year.
  • 1939: Shows her work in “Mexique,” a group exhibition at Galerie Renou et Colle, Paris, organized by André Breton. She also sells her painting The Frame to the French government. Later that year she divorces Rivera.
  • 1940: Kahlo’s work is shown in the “International Exhibition of Surrealism” at Galería de Arte Mexicano, Mexico City, and in “Twenty Centuries of Mexican Art” at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City. She remarries Rivera at the end of the year.
  • 1943–54: Teaches at La Esmeralda (previously known as the Ministry of Public Education’s School of Painting and Sculpture), Mexico City, holding classes from her home at La Casa Azul (“The Blue House”) when she is too ill to travel.
  • 1953: Kahlo has her first solo exhibition in her home country, at Galería de Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City. She attends in a bed because of illness. Her right leg is amputated later that year as a result of gangrene.
  • 1954: Dies in her home in Coyoacán, Mexico, on July 13, days after her 47th birthday.

Kahlo was born to a German father of Hungarian descent and a Mexican mother of Spanish and Native American descent. Later, during her artistic career, Kahlo explored her identity by frequently depicting her ancestry as binary opposites: the colonial European side and the Indigenous Mexican side. As a child, she suffered a bout of polio that left her with a slight limp, an ailment she endured throughout her life.

Kahlo was especially close to her father, a professional photographer, and she frequently assisted him in his studio, where she acquired a sharp eye for detail. Although Kahlo took some drawing classes, she was more interested in science, and in 1922 she entered the National Preparatory School in Mexico City with an interest in eventually studying medicine. While there she met Rivera, who was working on a mural for the school’s auditorium.

In 1925 Kahlo was riding a bus home from school when it collided with a trolley. She was seriously injured in the accident, with multiple fractures in her spine, right leg, collarbone, ribs, and pelvis. Her shoulder was dislocated, her right foot crushed, and her abdomen and uterus punctured by an iron handrail. She later joked that this was the moment she lost her virginity. The injuries plagued Kahlo for the rest of her life, and she underwent more than 30 medical procedures in subsequent decades.

Frida Kahlo: Self-Portrait Wearing a Velvet Dress
Frida Kahlo: Self-Portrait Wearing a Velvet DressA visitor looking at Self-Portrait Wearing a Velvet Dress, oil on canvas by Frida Kahlo, 1926; on display in the exhibition “Frida Kahlo/Diego Rivera: Art in Fusion” (2013) at the Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris.(more)

While bedridden Kahlo taught herself to paint, and she read frequently, studying the art of the Old Masters. In one of her early paintings, Self-Portrait Wearing a Velvet Dress (1926), Kahlo painted a waist-length portrait of herself against a dark background with stylized waves. Although the painting is fairly abstract, Kahlo’s soft modeling of her face shows her interest in naturalism. The stoic gaze so prevalent in her later art is already evident, and the exaggeratedly long neck and fingers reveal her interest in the Mannerist painter Il Bronzino. After her convalescence, Kahlo joined the Mexican Communist Party (PCM), where she met Rivera once again. She showed him some of her work, and he encouraged her to continue to paint.

Tate Modern extension Switch House, London, England. (Tavatnik, museums). Photo dated 2017. Britannica Quiz Can You Match These Lesser-Known Paintings to Their Artists?

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