2. Frida Kahlo was one of the greatest Mexican artists of the twentieth century. She was born in Coyoacan, Mexico, In 1907. Frida grew up during the Mexican Revolution, an event that influenced her life and changed the art of Mexico forever.
3. Frida often showed unpleasant things that happened during her life. These paintings are sometimes shocking to people. But Frida needed to paint them to help her through some hard times. This painting Without Hope, was done after a serious illness. Frida was weak and had no appetite, Her doctors wanted her to eat lots of strained foods. She was disgusted by the idea of being forced to eat, and showed how she felt about this in her painting.
11. Frida Kahlo's fundamental needs, values, and orientation towards life are symbolized by the four astrological elements: fire (warmth, inspiration, enthusiasm) earth (practicality, realism, material interests) air (social and intellectual qualities) water (emotional needs and feelings).
12. frequently used technical devices and subject matter from Mexican archaeology and folk art. broad, simplified color areas and a deliberately naive style in her paintings. she wanted her paintings to affirm her Mexican identity inclusion of free use of space, and the juxtaposition of incongruous objects.
13. Surrealist? Not quite. She did not renounce Surrealism immediately. in January 1940, she was a participant in the International Exhibition of Surrealism held in Mexico City. Later, she was intense in her denials that she had ever been a true Surrealist. 'They thought I was a Surrealist,' she said, 'but I wasn't. I never painted dreams. I painted my own reality
14. Kahlo primarily depicted her personal experience. She frequently focused on the painful aspects of her life, using graphic imagery to convey her meaning. The turbulence of her marriage is shown in the weeping and physically injured self-portraits she painted when she felt rejected by Rivera. She portrayed her physical disintegration, the result of the bus accident, in such works as The Broken Column (1944, Collection of Dolores Olmedo Foundation, Mexico City), in which she wears a metal brace and her body is open to reveal a broken column in place of her spine. Her sorrow over her inability to bear children is revealed in paintings such as Henry Ford Hospital (1932, Collection of Dolores Olmedo Foundation), in which objects that include a baby, a pelvic bone, and a machine hover around a hospital bed where she lies having a miscarriage.