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Word: frida (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...oils and 20 drawings represented 20 years of creative effort and most of them were of Frida Kahlo herself, painted with tiny, meticulous brush strokes and clear, strong colors. There was a moody Frida with an opening in her finely shaped head exposing a childlike skull & crossbones, a gay Frida in schoolgirl dress, Frida as a wounded deer, as an agonized figure writhing on a hospital bed. The overall impression was of a painful autobiography set down with brush & paint...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Mexican Autobiography | 4/27/1953 | See Source »

...Frida Kahlo has a lot of painful memories to wash away. She was just 16 when she was smashed up in a bus accident. She spent a year in a cast, countless months in bed at home. To relieve the boredom, she started painting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Mexican Autobiography | 4/27/1953 | See Source »

...results drew encouraging praise from Mexico's famed Jose Clemente Orozco. Diego Rivera was even more interested. Frida had known him since childhood, and when he divorced his second wife, they embarked on a violent courtship. Both were temperamental and noisy Communists; Frida proudly points out that she has never been expelled from the party (as Diego was). Much of the time since their marriage in 1929, Frida spent in & out of hospitals. But she never stopped painting, in a style that bears only a suggestion of Diego's technique...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Mexican Autobiography | 4/27/1953 | See Source »

While Diego was piling up laurels at home, Frida showed her pictures mainly in the U.S. and Europe. Though she had many friends and sold paintings privately, Mexico never gave her a public show. Frida thinks it was because of distaste for her surrealist label. "They thought I was a surrealist, but I wasn't. I never painted dreams. I painted my own reality...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Mexican Autobiography | 4/27/1953 | See Source »

After seeing her show last week, Mexico could understand Frida Kahlo's hard reality. And it is getting even harder. Recently, her condition has been getting worse; friends who remember her as a plump, vigorous woman are shocked by her haggard appearance. She cannot stand for more than ten minutes at a time now, and there is a threat of gangrene in one foot. But each day, Frida Kahlo still struggles to her chair to paint-even if only for a short while. "I am not sick," she says. "I am broken. But I am happy to be alive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Mexican Autobiography | 4/27/1953 | See Source »

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