FRIDA
KAHLO
Her Photos
Pablo Ortiz Monasterio
Hardbound,
6½" x 9", 496
pages
460 duotone illustrations
2010, RM
Edited by Pablo Ortiz Monasterio
From the Publisher:
When Frida Kahlo died in 1954, her husband Diego
Rivera asked the poet Carlos Pellicer to turn her family home,
the fabled Blue House, into a museum. Pellicer selected some paintings,
drawings, photographs, books and ceramics, maintaining the space
just as Kahlo and Rivera had arranged it to live and work in.
The rest of the objects, clothing, documents, drawings and letters,
as well as over 6,000 photographs collected by Kahlo over the
course of her life,were put away in bathrooms that had been converted
into storerooms. This incredible trove remained hidden for more
than half a century, until, just a few years ago, these storerooms
and wardrobes were opened up. Kahlo’s photograph collection
was a major revelation among these finds, a testimony to the tastes
and interests of the famous couple, not only through the images
themselves but also through the telling annotations inscribed
upon them. Photography had always been a part of Kahlo’s
life—her father Guillermo Kahlo was one of the great Mexican
photographers at the beginning of the twentieth century—and
her collection constitutes a roll call of great photographers:
Man Ray, Brassaï, Martin Munkacsi, Pierre Verger, George
Hurrel, Tina Modotti, EdwardWeston, Manuel and Lola Álvarez
Bravo, Gisèle Freund and many others, including Kahlo herself.
It is likely that many of the unattributed photographs in the
collection were taken by her, though we can only be sure of the
few that she decided to sign in 1929. Frida Kahlo: Her Photos
allows us to speculate about Kahlo’s and Rivera’s
likes and dislikes, and to document their family origins; it supplies
a thrilling and hugely significant addition to our knowledge of
Kahlo’s life and work.
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