- ISBN 9780500301234
- 17.70 x 12.50 cm
- Paperback
- 144pp
- Illustrated in colour and black and white throughout
- First published 2008
- See more books in theNew Horizons Series
Add to Basket'The art of Frida Kahlo is a ribbon around a bomb’ – André Breton
This book traces the extraordinary life of an artist whose unforgettable imagery combined cruelty and wit, honesty and insolence, pain and empowerment.
Admired by the Surrealists and photographed by the greatest, Frida was most renowned for her self-portraits and unusual still lifes. She learned about suffering at an early age. She contracted polio when she was six and was seriously maimed in a bus accident at the age of eighteen, which led to injuries that affected her for the rest of her life. She had a legendarily turbulent marriage to the great mural painter Diego Rivera, with whom she formed a strong attachment to indigenous Mexican folk art and a deep commitment to Communism.
Also of interest
Women Artists and The Surrealist Movement
Women, Art and Society
Latin American Art of the 20th Century
Significant Others: Creativity and Intimate Partnership
Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Mexican Modernism





