Vancouver Sun

Lifting the veil on artist’s other loves

Frida Kahlo’s passion for gardening and nature in evidence at sprawling show

- KATHERINE ROTH

In a sprawling, multi-disciplina­ry show, The New York Botanical Garden focuses on a long-over looked side of artist Frida Kahlo: her deep connection to Mexico’s plants and flowers, and how they inspired her art.

“Flora is a very important part of her creativity,” said guest curator Ariana Zavala, a specialist in Mexican art and director of Latino Studies at Tufts University. Even those who thought they knew everything about Kahlo, Zavala said, will come away having learned something new.

The exhibit, Frida Kahlo: Art, Garden, Life, includes 14 of Kahlo’s original works; a replica of the garden at her Mexico City home, Casa Azul (Blue House); plentiful photos from Kahlo’s life; and various Mexican cultural offerings. It will be on view through Nov. 1.

A good place to begin is in the huge, glass Enid A. Haupt Conservato­ry, where the focus is on the gardens of La Casa Azul, where Kahlo was born in 1907, lived for years with muralist Diego Rivera, and died in 1954. Pathways are lined with sunflowers, marigolds, fuchsia, palms, jacaranda, oleander, and numerous succulents and cacti, many of which still grow at Casa Azul, which is now a museum.

The lush, indigo-blue walls of Kahlo’s home have been vividly rendered, as has her garden’s Aztec-inspired pyramid, designed by Rivera, who painted it a dazzling rose, blue and yellow. Here, it holds an array of native Mexican succulents and cacti in huge terracotta planters.

In researchin­g the show, horticultu­ralists at the botanical garden, working with colleagues in Mexico and a longtime volunteer gardener at Casa Azul, came to understand Kahlo as an expert in plants, with an impressive botanical library. She replanted her parents’ European- style garden with a mix of cacti and succulents, which she saw as symbolic of the native plants of Mexico, and with tropical plants, fruit trees, and other edible or medicinal plants.

“When we learned about Kahlo as a truly sophistica­ted gardener, who also happened to be a great artist and cultural icon, we were blown away,” said Todd Forrest, the botanical garden’s vice-president for horticultu­re and living collection­s.

Over time, Kahlo transforme­d Casa Azul into an expression of her deep connection to the natural world and to Mexico.

Her studio overlooked the garden, and the plants came to play an important role in her art.

“As we studied Frida Kahlo through her plants, two important themes emerged: those of duality and of hybridity,” Zavala said.

Both themes are illustrate­d in the 14 artworks on view at the garden’s LuEsther T. Mertz Library art gallery. In Kahlo’s 1931 Portrait of Luther Burbank, the horticultu­ralist, whose garden she and Rivera had visited, is depicted as a hybrid planthuman. Kahlo, whose father was born in Germany and whose mother was Mexican, repeated this theme of hybrid origin in other works on view.

In conjunctio­n with the show, the garden is offering an array of cultural offerings to celebrate the artist. “Frida liked to have fun. She had a love of life. This project is a celebratio­n of Mexico,” said Zavala.

 ?? IVO M. VERMEULEN/THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN ?? The Two Fridas by artist Humberto Spindola are displayed at the Frida Kahlo: Art, Garden, Life exhibit at The New York Botanical Garden in Bronx, N.Y. The show runs through Nov. 1.
IVO M. VERMEULEN/THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN The Two Fridas by artist Humberto Spindola are displayed at the Frida Kahlo: Art, Garden, Life exhibit at The New York Botanical Garden in Bronx, N.Y. The show runs through Nov. 1.

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