Springboard English language Arts. CollegeBoard, 2015.27. However although her culture was a big ingredient, it was Frida’s visualization of herself and the reality she was living in conveyed in her artistry. She painted with no hesitation concerning the depth of her suffering heart, “” The only thing I know is that I paint because I need to, and I paint always whatever passes through my head without any other consideration” CollegeBoard, 2015 The explicitness of her painting caught many off guard leaving the observers in the pit of her insanity; in other words her paintings were the eyes of her soul.…
In this essay I'm going to investigate two portrait painters, Alison Watt and Pablo Picasso. I will be writing about their lives and influences.…
Frida Kahlo De Rivera (1907- 1954), was a Mexican artist whose works “were strongly linked with her own life experiences, whilst also relating to world events, politics and the wider art world.” Kahlo is best known for her self-portraits, they demonstrate her need for self-expression and her exploration of identity. Although her physical features and eccentric costumes are striking and eye-catching, it is her internal life that explodes beyond the canvas. Kahlo’s unique portrait style jumps straight to the art of profoundly felt passions and sorrows. “Juxtaposing the familiar with the strange, marrying naturalistic depiction with bizarre symbolism, Kahlo is able to convince us…
The artist of the work, The Two Fridas, is Frida Kahlo who was best known for her self portraits. This piece was finished in Paris, France in 1939. It is displayed in the Gallery Museum Modern Art in Mexico City, Mexico. To make this self portrait Frida used canvas and her technique was oils. When a viewer would like upon this piece, they would see two women sitting side by side. The onlooker may come to the assumption that these two women are either identical twins or sisters. In this artwork there could be multiple subjects. For example, the fact that these two Fridas are holding hands can signify the thought of Siamese twins. However, this piece can also personify a split personality. The reason for this suggestion is because these two Fridas are the same women, however each of them are portrayed in very different ways. The Frida on the right is in a Mexican dress, with masculine…
Rivera did this painting to represent the human race at the crosswords reinforcing forces and ideologies such as: science, industrialization, Communism, and capitalism. (The Art Story Foundation Site). *Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park (1947-1948) In this work, Rivera painted himself as a kid and his wife Frida right behind him. This was done to symbolize the Mexican popular culture (The Art Story Foundation Site).…
He painted on the treatment of the poor and how they were oppressed workers, but most importantly he tried to capture in his murals the everyday beauty of Mexico’s labor in and out of the fields. These murals sprouted cultural change. Diego Rivera’s unique way of depicting Mexico is what made him grow popularity with indigenous people and Mexican people from all different economic class (Kettenmann…
Frida Kahlo was born in 1907, just south of Mexico City, in a town called Coyoacán. Her father, Guillermo Kahlo, was Jewish and born in Germany. When he immigrated to Mexico he married Frida’s mother, Matilde Calderón, a catholic mestizo. Frida identified herself with both her European ancestry and her indigenous heritage. Unlike many mestizo or mixed persons, who tried to hide their indigenous background, Frida had a strong sense of pride in her mixed heritage. She embraced Mexican indigenous identities and it was this that developed her nationalist ideologies. At fifteen Frida attended the National Preparatory School, and this is when she started to associate with the Mexican Communist party. When she turned of age the Revolutionary government had just recently been formed and she started contributing to the movement in interesting ways. “Frida expressed her nationalism in personal ways- fancy traditional hairstyles, pre-Columbian jewelry, and the folk Tehuana dress of southern Mexico”(Chasteen. 226). Through Frida’s participation in the young communist league, she met and began interactions with Diego Rivera…
Frida Kahlo was born on July 6, 1907 in Coyoacán, Mexico. Her birth name is Magdalena Carmen Frieda Kahlo Y Caldrón. Frida is best known for her self-portraits. Frida's art work has been celebrated in Mexico as an emblem of native tradition, and also for feminists for its vivid detail of female life & form. Her work features Mexican tradition and is often described as folk art. Frida had an unpredictable marriage with another Mexican artist, Diego Rivera. All her life she has suffered through health problems, which were mostly caused by a traffic accident she survived as a teenager.…
By the year of 1930, Diego Rivera had an international favor for his passionate and lush murals. He was inspired by Communistic ideas and he had an intense…
Frida Kahlo was a strong revolutionary female artist that emerged out of Mexico during its time of turmoil and growth. By examining her unique upbringing as a child, to her outlook on Mexico’s quest to situate an national identity to their masses without any influences from European ideologies, I feel that Frida Kahlo was an early feminist that help pave the way for women in Mexico to achieve equal opportunities, not only in a cultural sense but also political. She was able to express her aesthetic views through portraits depicting social and cultural taboos that were still plaguing the Mexican women after the socialist and muralist movements.…
Much has been written to document the life and works of Frida Kahlo, and with good reason. Born during the years of before the Mexican Revolution, Frida Kahlo was the “poster child” for personal pain and tragedy. Her life included a series of illnesses and misfortunes that led to the personality and reflection of the woman in her artwork. Her marriage to Diego Rivera, a prominent Mexican muralist, was one of the “great tragedies” of her life, but also contributed to defining herself as an independent woman who defied all the stereotypes of women as artists that existed. The other tradegy included a very serious bus accident that left her permanently scared and lame. Her paintings…
I started my journey walking to the right then into the very first room to the right. As I continued my on my way I came across Pablo Picasso’s Head of Woman 1943 and Woman in a Red Armchair 1929. As a child in elementary I remembered learning about him and being so curious in his work, how different he was compared to the norm. As I stood in front of each other these paintings I questioned what is art? I too could create something so similar however it would be only be after being inspired by his work. To whom does he give credit to for being so imaginative and willingness to be different and out of the ordinary? This is how he became PICSSO!…
Frida Kahlo once said, “To trap one’s self suffering is to risk being devoured from the inside.” Race and gender have been and still are a huge deal for all people. Many people have issues with the mixtures of races there is all over the world, but there are only so many of us that are actually affected by it. There will always be injustice between gender roles and also discrimination against colored people. Before women began to fight for their rights, many women were not allowed to express themselves. They were mistreated and disrespected by their husbands and men around them. They believed they deserved a voice and that they were capable of making their own decisions. As women began to rebel many men felt threatened and thought that all…
In the painting Frida is the focal point. She uses bright colours such as orange and yellow on her outfit to make herself stand out; she wears traditional Mexican clothing, a long dress with white material underneath and has her hair loose to show the combination of American and Mexican culture in her life. Frida is at a low advantage point she is looking down and there is distant land in the foreground this shows the isolation Frida feels in her life. The painting is full of earthy tones, browns, pinks, greens, whites which complement one another to further express this connection with nature, such as the orange of her dress and the blue of the sky. All of these methods, composition, costume, and colour create a striking effect and draw your eyes to important details of the painting.…
The infamous Frida Kahlo was born on July 6th, 1907 at her parents home (known as La Casa Azul or ‘The Blue House’) in Coyoacan, a town around the outskirts of Mexico City. She was incredibly proud of her heritage often dressing in bright, unique Tehuana costume. She later became famous for her facial hair that she embraced, not caring for social norms. Frida would have a difficult life ahead of her, and the obstacles started early. When she was just six years old she contracted polio and was bedridden for nine months, giving her her first look at life in a hospital bed. She was encouraged to practise traditional male activities such as swimming, soccer, and wrestling to help her…