Frida Kahlo
born July 6, 1907, Coyoacán, Mex.
died July 13, 1954, Coyoacán
In full Frida Kahlo de Rivera, originalname Magdalena Carmen Frida Kahlo y
Calderón Mexican painter noted for her intense, brilliantly coloured
self-portraits painted in a primitivistic style. Though she denied the
connection, she is often identified as a Surrealist. She was married to
muralist Diego Rivera (1929, separated 1939, remarried 1941).
In 1925 Kahlo was involved in a bus accident that so seriously injured her
that she had to undergo some 35 medical operations. During her slow
recovery from the trauma, Kahlo taught herself to paint. She showed her
early efforts to Rivera, whom she had met a few years earlier, and he
encouraged her to continue to paint. After their marriage, Kahlo traveled
(1930–33) with Rivera, who had received commissions for murals from
several cities in the United States. In 1938 she met André Breton, a
leading Surrealist, who championed her work; both Breton and Marcel
Duchamp were influential in arranging for some of the exhibits of her work
in the United States and Europe. In 1943 she was appointed a professor of
painting at La Esmeralda, the Education Ministry's School of Fine Arts.
Her house in Coyoacán is now the Frida Kahlo Museum. The Diary of Frida
Kahlo, covering the years 1944–54, and The Letters of Frida Kahlo were
both published in 1995.