Read the excerpt from Frida Kahlo by Hedda Garza.During their courtship, Kahlo painted more than ever. At first she dabbled with murals herself, but Rivera insisted that she develop her own unique style. He was willing to teach her technique, but he refused to interfere with her creative ideas. Nevertheless, his desire to immortalize the Indians of Mexico influenced Kahlo's paintings during that period. In The Bus, painted in 1929, the bold colors and the Indian woman with her baby were reminiscent of Rivera’s style.
Read the excerpt from Frida Kahlo by Hedda Garza.On September 17, 1925, after hours of emergency surgery in the Red Cross Hospital, Frida Kahlo was carried into a gloomy ward, the place where people without much money were taken. Twenty-four other seriously ill and injured patients occupied the beds surrounding hers. One overworked nurse tended to all of them.
Read the excerpt from Frida Kahlo by Hedda Garza.Lonely, immobile, and in pain, Kahlo begged her father to allow her to use his paints. Mathilde Kahlo ordered a special easel for her bedridden young daughter, and a mirror was installed on the inside of the canopy over her bed.
Read the excerpt from Frida Kahlo by Hedda Garza.Aside from the caricatures she had scribbled in school and the drawings for Fernando Fernández, Kahlo had never paid much attention to art. She began teaching herself from art books, studying the works of the Italian Renaissance artists and experimenting with the colors in her father's paint box. She painted portraits of visitors and relatives who were willing to sit and pose for her and gave the paintings away as gifts.
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Read the excerpt from Frida Kahlo by Hedda Garza.Curious to know more about the daring young girl below, the bulky Rivera made the slow descent to the ground floor. Kahlo wasted no time in preliminaries. . . . "I have come to show you my paintings," she told him audaciously. She told him her name and Rivera remembered that just a few years earlier, the director of the National Preparatory had told him that the girl who had caused him so much trouble was the same Frida Kahlo. Instead of becoming angry at Kahlo's audacity, the unconventional artist was delighted to meet his former tormentor face to face.
Read the excerpt from Frida Kahlo by Hedda Garza.During the previous year he had introduced Kahlo to a whole new world—the group that assembled weekly at the home of the Italian-born American photographer Tina Modotti.Modotti became Kahlo’s role model. She had come to Mexico a few years earlier as the protégée of the famous American photographer Edward Weston. When Weston went home, Modotti stayed, photographing the peasants of Mexico and posing for Diego Rivera. . . .Modotti was unlike any woman Kahlo had ever met. Independent, daring, revolutionary, Modotti befriended the young painter and sponsored her membership in the Mexican Communist party.
Read the excerpt from Frida Kahlo by Hedda Garza.Despite her pessimism, Kahlo's love of life prevailed. Her broken bones healed, and her spirits improved when she was able to leave her bed and walk. Still in pain and limping, Kahlo decided not to return to school. "I felt I had energies for anything except studying to become a doctor," she wrote in one of her many notes to Gómez.
Read the excerpt from Frida Kahlo by Hedda Garza.Then she turned to the mirror on her canopy and painted the first of many self-portraits, a gift for Alex Gómez, who was still avoiding her. She completed the portrait in time for the first anniversary of the bus accident. It portrayed her in perfect health and wearing an elegant red velvet dress. . . . "Put it in a low place so that you can see it as if you are looking at me,” she wrote in her note accompanying the portrait.The friendship between Kahlo and Gómez resumed, but their romance was apparently dead. In March 1927, Gómez, now studying law, left for a work-study program in Germany, telling Kahlo he would return in July. As he was about to depart, he claimed falsely that an aunt was having surgery and he had to rush off to help her, avoiding a personal farewell at Kahlo’s bedside.
Read the excerpt from Frida Kahlo by Hedda Garza.At a get-together at Modotti’s home, Kahlo saw Diego Rivera again. Later, he did not remember the shy young girl quietly watching the crowd of celebrities. But Kahlo was fascinated by the impetuous Rivera. In many ways they were alike. Both were outrageous pranksters and born masters of exaggeration. . . . "I began to be very interested in him, in spite of the fear I had of him,” she later recalled.That interest would turn into the love of her life.
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