Gerry Souter

Kahlo


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      Portrait of Alicia Galant

      1927

      Oil on canvas, 107 × 93.5 cm

      Museo Dolores Olmedo Patiño, Mexico City

      She devoured her new freedom from mind-numbing domestic chores and hung out with a number of cliques within the school’s social structure. She found a real sense of belonging with the Cachuchas gang of intellectual bohemians – named after the type of hat they wore. Leading this motley elitist mob was Alejandro Gomez Arias, who reiterated in countless speeches that a new enlightenment for Mexico required “optimism, sacrifice, love, joy” and bold leadership.

      Portrait of My Sister Cristina

      1928

      Oil on wood, 99 × 81.5 cm

      Collection Otto Atencio Troconis, Caracas

      She remained a committed and vocal Communist for the rest of her life. The atmosphere in Mexico City was alive with political debate and danger, as volatile speakers stepped forward to challenge whatever regime claimed power only to be gunned down in the street, or absorbed into the corruption. Diaz fell to Madero who lasted 13 months until he stopped a lethal load of bullets from his general Victoriano Huerta.

      Portrait of Alejandro Gómez Arias

      1928

      Oil on canvas, Bequest of Alejandro Gómez Arias,

      Mexico City

      Later, Venustiano Carranza assumed power as Huerta fled Mexico, and was no better than the lot who had preceded him. Into this vacuum were thrust the proletariat ideals of the Communist revolution that had swept Russia following the assassination of the Czar and his family in 1917. The socialist theories of Marx and Engels looked promising after the slaughter of the seemingly endless Mexican revolution.

      Girl in Diaper

      1929

      Oil on canvas, 65.5 × 44 cm

      (Portrait of Isolda Pinedo Kahlo)

      Private collection

      And yet, for all this progressive political dialectic and debate, Frida retained some of her mother’s Catholic teachings and developed a passionate love of all things traditionally Mexican. During this time, her father gave her a set of water colors and brushes. He often took his paints along with his camera on expeditions and assignments.

      The Bus

      1929

      Oil on canvas, 25.8 × 55.5 cm

      Museo Dolores Olmedo Patiño, Mexico City

      Frida became a casual student at the Preparatory School, enjoying the stimulation of her intellectual friends rather than the formal studies. During this period, she learned the minister of education had commissioned a large mural to be painted in the Preparatory School courtyard. It was titled Creation and covered 150 square meters of wall. The muralist was the Mexican artist, Diego Rivera, who had been working in Europe for the past 14 years.

      Portrait of Virginia

      1929

      Oil on masonite, 77.3 × 60 cm

      Museo Dolores Olmedo Patiño, Mexico City

      To Frida, the creation of the growing scene spreading its way across the blank wall was fascinating. She and some friends often sneaked into the auditorium to watch Rivera work. From a very early age, Frida had been taught by her father to appreciate the art of painting. As part of her education he encouraged her to copy popular prints and drawings of other artists.

      Self-Portrait “Time Flies”

      1929

      Oil on masonite, 86 × 68 cm

      Private collection, USA

      To ease the financial situation at home, she apprenticed with the engraver Fernando Fernandez. Fernandez praised her work and gave her time to copy prints and drawings with pen and ink – as a hobby, a means of personal expression, not as “art” because she had no thought of becoming a professional artist. She considered the skills of artists such as Diego Rivera far beyond her capabilities.

      Portrait of a Lady in White

      c.1929

      Oil on canvas, 119 × 81 cm

      Private collection, Germany

      And then everything changed forever. In Kahlo’s words to author, Raquel Tibol:

      The buses in those days were absolutely flimsy; they had started to run and were very successful, but the streetcars were empty. I boarded the bus with Alejandro Gomez Arias and was sitting next to him on the end next to the handrail.

      Moments later the bus crashed into a streetcar of the Xochimilco Line and the streetcar crushed the bus against the street corner. It was a strange crash, not violent, but dull and slow, and it injured everyone, me much more seriously…

      Self-Portrait

      1930

      Oil on canvas, 65 × 55 cm

      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

      The scene of the accident was gruesome. The iron handrail had stabbed through her hip and emerged through her vagina. A gout of blood hemorrhaged from her wound.

      Nude of Frida Kahlo

      Diego Rivera, 1930

      Lithography, 44 × 30 cm

      Signed and dated on bottom, right hand corner: D. R.30

      Museo Dolores Olmedo Patiño, Mexico City

      In the chaos, one bystander insisted the hand rail be removed from her. He reached down and tore it from the wound. She screamed so loud the approaching ambulance siren could not be heard.

      The devastation to Frida Kahlo’s body can only be imagined, but its implications were far worse once she realized she would survive.

      Portrait of Dr. Leo Eloesser

      1931

      Oil on masonite, 85.1 × 59.7 cm

      University of California, School of Medicine, San Francisco

      This vital, vivacious young girl on the brink of any number of career possibilities had been reduced to a bed-bound invalid. Only her youth and vitality saved her life. Her father’s ability to earn enough money to feed his family and pay Frida’s medical bills had diminished with the Mexican economy. This necessitated lengthening her stay in the overburdened, undermanned Red Cross hospital for a month.

      Window Display in a Street in Detroit

      1931

      Oil on metal plate, 30.3