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March 10, 2010

Frida Kahlo: Individualist and Surrealist

The sharp individualism of Surrealist painter Frida Kahlo appeals to a broad demographic of artists. Kahlo’s autobiographical content denotes the universal themes of human pain and suffering in the restraint of painting .
Drawing inspiration from her collective hidden, she produced a number of seemingly expressionless self-portraits, all of which conveyed the tragedies that permeated her existence. Kahlo suffered the devastating effects of polio all through her early childhood, which left her aptly leg withered and thinner than the left. She was later plagued with excruciating pain with being injured in a car accident at the age of eighteen. This led to her struggles with infertility, which in turn led to a conflict of consciousness in her work. Kahlo’s rejection of her disturbing reality was translated into bold colors and violent symbolism. Painting provided Kahlo coping with mechanisms for how to survive such periods of grief and helplessness. She is a supreme example of courage.

  This fastidious cut showcases the brash personality traits for which the artist is remembered.


                                             Frida Kahlo
                                             Self-Portrait with Monkey 1938

Source: http://adenamacri.blogspot.com/2010/03/frida-kahlo-individualist-and.html

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