Kahlo, Frida - Surrealismo

Self-Portrait - 1926
Oil on canvas
31 x 23 in
Private collection, Mexico City

Henry Ford Hospital - 1932
Oil on metal
12 1/4 x 15 1/2 in
Collection Dolores Olmedo Foundation, Mexico City

Self-Portrait on the Bordeline Between Mexico and the United States, 1932
Oil on canvas
Collection Manuel Reyero. New York. USA

My Dress Hangs There, 1933
Oil and collage on masonite
45.7x48.9cm
Estate of Dr. Leo Eloesser

A Few Small Nips - 1935
Oil on metal
15 x 19 in
Collection of Dolores Olmedo Foundation, Mexico City

Self-Portrait (Dedicated to Leon Trotsky) - 1937
Oil on Masonite
30 x 24 in
National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington

Mi nana y yo (My Nanny and I), 1937
Oil on plate
30.50 X 34.50 cm
Museo Dolores Olmedo Patiño

Fruits of the Earth - 1938
Oil on masonite
16 x 23 1/2 in. (40.6 x 60 cm)
Collection Banco Nacional de Mexico, S.A., Mexico City

Self-Portrait with Monkey - 1938
Oil on Masonite
16 x 12 in
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo

What the Water Gave Me - 1938
Oil on canvas
38 x 30 in
Isadore Ducasse Fine Arts, New York

The Two Fridas - 1939
Oil on canvas
68 x 68 in. (173 x 173 cm)
Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City

Two Nudes in the Wool, 1939
Oil on canvas
Private collection

Self-Portrait - 1940
Oil on canvas
24 1/2 x 18 3/4 in
Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, Austin

Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair - 1940
Oil on canvas
15 3/4 x 11" (40 x 27.9 cm)~
Museum of Modern Art, New York City

Self-Portrait - 1940
Oil on Masonite
23 1/2 x 15 3/4 in
Private collection, United States

The Dream, 1940
Collection Selma and Nesuhi Ertegun, New York

Autorretrato con Trenza - 1941
Oleo sobre tela
51 x 38,5 cm
Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires

Me and my Parrots, 1941
Oil on masonite
Collection Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Stream, New Orleans

Self-Portrait as a Tehuana (Diego on My Mind) - 1943
Oil on Masonite
29 7/8 x 24 in
Gelman Collection, Mexico City

Flower of Life, 1943
Oil on masonite
Dolores Olmedo Collection, Mexico City, Mexico

Thinking About Death, 1943
Oil on canvas mounted on masonite
45.1x36.8cm
Private collection, Mexico City

Portrait of Dona Rosita Morillo - 1944
Oil on canvas, mounted on masonite
30 x 23 7/8 in. (76 x 60.5 cm)
Museo Dolores Olmedo Patina, Mexico City

The Broken Column, 1944
Oil on masonite
Collection Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City

Sin esperanza, 1945
Óleo on masonite
28 x 36 cm
Museo Dolores Olmedo Patiño, México City, México

The Little Deer - 1946
Oil on Masonite
8 7/8 x 11 7/8 in
Collection of Mrs. Carolyn Farb, Houston

Tree of Hope - 1946
Oil on Masonite
22 x 16 in
Isadore Ducasse Fine Arts, New York

Self-Portrait with Loose Hair - 1947
Oil on masonite
24 x 17 3/4 in. (61 x 45 cm)
Private collection

Self-Portrait, 1948
Oil on masonite
Private collection

The Love Embrace of the Universe, the Earth (Mexico), Me, and Senor Xolotl - 1949
Oil on canvas
27 1/2 x 23 7/8 in
Collection of Jorge Contreras Chacel, Mexico City

Self-Portrait with the Portrait of Doctor Farill - 1951
Oil on Masonite
16 1/2 x 19 3/4 in
Private collection, Mexico City

Living Nature, 1952
Oil on masonite
Collection María Félix, Mexico City
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Sentada numa simples cadeira de madeira e vestida com um fato de homem cinzento (Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair - 1940), a autora encontra-se rodeada de molhos de cabelo. Tudo o que simbolizava a sua feminilidade - o seu belo cabelo e os seus vestidos coloridos - desapareceu. No topo do quadro, por cima de uma pauta musical, lêem-se as letras amargas: «Olha, se te amava, era pelo teu cabelo. Agora que estás careca, não te amo mais». Este quadro foi feiro num período de profundo desespero, quando Khalo se divorciava do marido, o famoso muralista Rivera. Acidentes e doença atravessaram a vida de Khalo, e os seus muitos auto-retratos centravam-se de forma agustiantemente pessoal nas suas experiências intensas e perturbações psicológicas. Tendo criado um estilo de fusão entre a arte tradicional hispano-americana e as experiências dos surrealistas (que consideravam o México o mais "surreal" dos lugares), participou activamente na política e arte do seu país, numa época em que a arte mexicana conheceu uma animação excepcional. Frida Khalo nasceu em Coyoacán, no México, em 1907 e morreu na Cidade do México em 1958.
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Born Magdalena Carmen Frieda Kahlo y Calderón on July 6, 1907, in Coyoicoán, Mexico. Considered one of Mexico's greatest artists, she began painting at the age of 18 after she was severely injured in a bus accident. While attending the National Preparatory School, she met the artist Diego Rivera. He encouraged her art and she later married him in 1929. Her work, fantastical and imaginative and yet deeply personal, consisted of many self-portraits. Kahlo's love of animals, her despair over a miscarriage, and other parts of her life and personality found their way to her canvases. By the end of the 1930s, Kahlo was beginning to be recognized for her own talents, not just as the wife of a famed muralist. She had solo exhibits in Paris and New York City. Despite battling pain and health problems most of her life, Kahlo continued to paint and share her love of art with others until her death. She died on July 13, 1954. Since her death, Kahlo has become an internationally known artist, and her work has been featured in numerous exhibits.
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10:36 PMFantástica Frida!
1:06 PM
FRIDA KAHLO, E DO MESMO NÍVEL DE
PICASSO, SALVADOR DALI... OU SEJA IMORTAL, GENIAL, ....
TENHO PROFUNDA PENA DAQUELES, E DESENHAM UM QUADRADO E DEITAM FALAÇÃO, PARA NOS CONVENCER QUE É ARTE....
BELO BLOG...OBRIGADO
6:19 PM
Frida e seu trabalho intenso, fogoso, desesperado e vívido como sempre foram seus olhos!!! Incrível Frida!!!
Parabéns pelo Blog, muito bom!!!
12:43 AM
Adorei as músicas, as imagens, as cores, principalmente de nossa valente Frida!
Abraço, Denise.
8:00 PM
Fantástico este Blog!!
Adoro Frida.
9:57 AM
I love Frida...so much love, pain, life in her paintings!
7:42 PM
Adoro a Frida Kalo !! tengo 14 años y quisiera poder ,algun dia , pintar como ella ... muito obriga x el blog
2:34 AM
Frida Kahlo é genial, suas imagens são doloridas, e muito me agrada, confesso que fico horas olhando as imagens de suas obras. Me hipnotiza.
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