Queen of the Unibrow

Again, apologies for the late delivery of my link-bank on Frida Kahlo (self portrait below).

According to Wikipedia

Frida Kahlo de Rivera (July 6, 1907 – July 13, 1954; born Magdalena Carmen Frieda Kahlo y Calderón)[2][3] was a Mexican painter, born in Coyoacán,[4] and perhaps best known for her self-portraits.[5]

Kahlo’s life began and ended in Mexico City, in her home known as the Blue House. She gave her birth date as July 7, 1910, but her birth certificate shows July 6, 1907. Kahlo had allegedly wanted the year of her birth to coincide with the year of the beginning of the Mexican revolution so that her life would begin with the birth of modern Mexico. At age 6 years, Frida developed polio, which caused her right leg to appear much thinner than the other. It was to remain that way permanently. [6] Her work has been celebrated in Mexico as emblematic of national and indigenous tradition, and by feminists for its uncompromising depiction of the female experience and form.[7]

Mexican culture and Amerindian cultural tradition are important in her work, which has been sometimes characterized as Naïve art or folk art.[8] Her work has also been described as “surrealist”, and during 1938 one surrealist described Kahlo as a “ribbon around a bomb”.[7]

Kahlo had a marriage with the famous Mexican artist Diego Rivera. She suffered lifelong health problems, many of which derived from a traffic accident during her teenage years. These issues are perhaps represented by her works, many of which are self-portraits of one sort or another. Kahlo suggested, “I paint myself because I am so often alone and because I am the subject I know best.”[9] She also stated, “I was born a bitch. I was born a painter.”[10]

I’m a big fan of Frida and her work.  I like her uni-brow and her un-bleached moustache.  She was a realist surrealist – if that makes any sense.  She painted who she saw, not what she saw.

And I don’t know what the monkey symbolizes.   Perhaps sometimes a monkey is a just monkey.

2 Comments

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2 Responses to Queen of the Unibrow

  1. Allen Lewis

    I’d be more worried about the panther over her left shourlder rather than the monkey on her right shoulder. Sometimes the animals that an artist adds to a self-portrait don’t symbolize anything. But it seems that the critics love to dissect and psychoanalize them.

  2. Pfly

    Ok ok, if you’re going to put Frida Kahlo in your comic strip, complete with a URL link here, I’ll add your blog to my reader feed thingie. And, can I suggest the book “The diary of Frida Kahlo”? (Google Books, http://books.google.com/books?id=YK7BsiRWdPMC — no preview but links to amazon, your local library, etc). The book consists of little more than pages from her last diaries, up to the very day or day before she died. Her diaries were full of drawings and sketch paintings. Basically, it’s amazing. That is all.

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