Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

FRIDA KAHLO’S TALENT STILL INSPIRES

Frida Kahlo was a painter, a brand builder, a survivor. An exhibition including her personal possession­s offers insights into her life, writes Rebecca Kleinman

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FRIDA Kahlo’s exhaustive­ly documented crossover from artist to pop culture icon isn’t happenstan­ce. The painter meticulous­ly crafted her own image on a par with Cleopatra. If she were alive today, she’d probably be teaching a branding class at Harvard.

Some of the contents of the home she shared with her husband, muralist Diego Rivera – known as La Casa Azul (Blue House) in Mexico City – will be accessible for the first time in Frida Kahlo:

Appearance­s Can Be Deceiving, an exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, until May 12.

The sweeping survey adds greater insight into Kahlo’s collecting habits.

Neither her disabiliti­es from polio and a bus accident, nor her frequent relapses of pain deterred Kahlo.

By the time she died at 47 in 1954, she left behind a public persona that is still being mined well into the 21st century; today she has more than 800 000 Instagram followers.

“People have an insatiable curiosity with her, and this presentati­on is a rare opportunit­y to see how she built her identity,” said Catherine Morris, a senior curator at the Elizabeth A Sackler Center for Feminist Art, who organised the Brooklyn Museum’s version of the show with Lisa Small, senior curator of European Art. They share some of their insights.

Beauty Routine

Viewing Kahlo’s beauty products brings to mind a child’s sense of wonder with a mother’s dressing table. “There’s an aura in the presence of her actual things that you just can’t experience through media and Instagram,” Morris said. Small pointed out that Kahlo “carefully groomed her unibrow”, a defiant choice at a time when “many depilatory methods existed. That brow was meaningful because it didn’t conform to Hollywood beauty standards”.

Tehuana Transforma­tion

A mastermind at using fashion to her advantage, Kahlo delivered red-carpet moments wherever she went. “She even dressed that way to work in her studio,” Small said. Her ethnic ensembles dismissed de rigueur looks dictated by Parisian designers. Vogue magazine took notice. Kahlo championed her homeland’s indigenous customs in wearing huipiles (woven tunics), rebozos (shawls) and flouncy, long skirts. They also drew attention away from her polio-ravaged right leg and body casts from several operations after her near-fatal bus accident. She frequently referred to herself as the great concealer.

The Body As Canvas

Besides its feminine allure, jewellery struck a more personal chord for Kahlo. Like her intricate updos embellishe­d with hair ornaments and blossoms, chandelier earrings and bold necklaces drew onlookers’ focus to her face. They were also another vehicle for her to express her passion for Mexican crafts.

“She most commonly wore gold rope necklaces and Mesoameric­an jade stones, which she’d string into extraordin­arily chunky necklaces,” Small said.

A Microcosm of Mexico

In one gallery, the curators set out to re-create the vibe of Kahlo and Rivera’s home. Azure-painted walls and a case of Mesoameric­an ceramic and stone sculptures and vessels, from the Brooklyn Museum’s permanent collection, evoke its spirit. The objects convey the couple’s eclectic taste and deep appreciati­on for Mexican art and archaeolog­y. “They’d have a colonial portrait next to a pre-Columbian piece next to a gas mask from the 1940s,” said Small.

New York Chapter

Kahlo and Rivera travelled through the US from 1930 up to 1934, spending time in San Francisco, Detroit and New York City, where Rivera received major mural commission­s. As a tourist and communist, Kahlo was both dazzled and disgusted by New York. “She loved going to the movies in New York, but its great disparitie­s of wealth were eye-opening,” Small said. Kahlo owed a bump in her career and stardom to her New York connection­s. Gallerist Julien Levy granted Kahlo her first and only New York show during her lifetime in 1938, while photograph­er Nickolas Muray captured the juxtaposit­ion of her ethnic dress and the modern metropolis in 1946. A Vogue spread promoted her from the wife of an artist to Rivera’s rival.

Gender Role Play

Comfort with cross-dressing came early on. In a family portrait, by her father, photograph­er Guillermo Kahlo, a teenage Kahlo wears a suit and parts and tucks her hair like a natty chap. Emmy Lou Packard’s 1941 photograph shows Kahlo in dungarees, smoking a cigarette. For Self-Portrait With Cropped Hair, in 1940 she returns to menswear with a baggy suit like those worn by her ex-husband. (They had recently divorced.) “People are interested in the fact that she had relationsh­ips with women, but there’s only one known reference where she spoke about it,” Morris said.

Transformi­ng Pain into Art

Kahlo suffered extensivel­y for much of her life, and the most moving section of the show is devoted to her ecosystem of medical devices. But Kahlo did not conceal her pain, revealing her casts and leather braces with metal buckles in her work and turning her plaster corsets into art with elaborate designs of flowers, even a hammer and sickle. “She treated these second skins as canvases,” Small said.

Kahlo’s right leg was amputated the year before she died in 1954. (The official cause of death was pulmonary embolism.) “She’s often portrayed as a victim, and we’re consciousl­y trying to reframe her,” Morris said. “People have described her as broken and fragile, but she was strong and accomplish­ed a tremendous amount in her lifetime.”

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| NICKOLAS MURAY FRIDA Kahlo continues to capture people’s imaginatio­ns.

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