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Frida Kahlo Research Paper

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Before her life as an artist, Frida Kahlo would suffer traumatic experiences that will lead her to taking her first steps into the world of art. She would experience pain in her childhood that will lead into her early adulthood. As an adult, Frida would then suffer a fatal accident as well as the infidelity of her husband. In addition to the personal issues she endured, she also dealt with the questioning of her national identity. Kahlo’s artistic abilities later led her to create self-portraits which often showed herself suffering. Using her personal tragedies, Frida Kahlo was able to render paintings that resembled pain and suffering.
Magdalena Carmen Frieda Kahlo Calderon was was born on July 6th 1907 in what is now known as Casa Azul …show more content…

This accident was considered to be the most influential tragedy towards her artwork and her life. Kahlo suffered multiple fractures throughout her body as well as a crushed pelvis leaving her to spend nine months in the a hospital bed and a plaster corset. This long recovery would lead her to experimenting with her artistic ability. Her father had given her a set of paints while she remained in her long recovery at the hospital. Kahlo would spend hours studying herself. She would confront the questions that had surfaced due to her trauma such as dissociation from identity, death, and interiority. This internal experience of self-discovery unfolded into the central qualities of Kahlo’s …show more content…

She had evolved her artwork to be a more assertive sense of Mexican identity thanks to the exposure of the modernist indigenist movement in Mexico and her interest in preserving the revival of Mexicanidad during the rise of fascism in Europe. She also began to distance herself from her Germanic roots as she changed her original name, Frieda to Frida. However, the terrible experience of two failed pregnancies had made a huge impact on her artwork as well. These influences are what created the harsh yet beautiful representation of the female experience through symbolism and autobiography. Nonetheless, throughout the 1930s life grew tenser and tenser. Rivera had been an unfaithful husband and the revolutionary climate leading up to the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War made for a tense atmosphere. Kahlo chose to separate from her husband in 1935 and had rented a flat for herself in Mexico City. The following year, Kahlo joined the Fourth International and returned to the Casa Azul, which became a meeting point for those part of the Fourth International. Several of Kahlo's masterpieces, such as The Two Fridas (1939), were painted within this time. They reflected the difficulty of this period. Kahlo visited Mexico City in 1930, where the founder of Surrealism, André Breton, took an interest in her paintings and hosted what would be Kahlo’s first exhibition in Paris of 1939 at Galerie Renou et Colle. Although the

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