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On the Cover
Cover image: Frieda Kahlo (1907-1954) �ARS, NY, La
Columna Rota, The Broken Column, self-portrait, 1944.
Dolores Olmedo Mexico
Photo Credit: Nicholas Sapieha / The Art Archive at Art
Resource, NY
Frieda Kahlo’s art is framed by her political passions, her
sexual defiance, her love involvement with Diego Rivera
and a lifelong narrative of physical pain and disabilities.
By most accounts the latter were related to the dreadful
injuries she sustained at age 18 when she was involved
in a streetcar crush that resulted in her being impaled by
a steel beam. She suffered multiple spine, pelvic, and
extremity fractures. Pain became a constant companion
and she reportedly underwent 32 surgical procedures to
treat the consequences of bone, soft tissue and visceral
injuries. She had deformity and chronic ulcerations of
her left leg that eventually became gangrenous and had
to be amputated a year before her death at age 47. But
these problems with her right leg were probably not due
to the horrific streetcar accident. Dr. Eloesser, an
American surgeon who treated her, corresponded with
her, and to whom she dedicated a portrait, noted that
she had radiological evidence of congenital spina bifida.
A6
Furthermore, when 6 years old, she contracted polio and
the residuals of that disease affected mostly her right leg.
Her paintings consists mainly of self-portraits that
narrate her life and circumstances, opening her raw
emotions to the viewer using symbols, garments,
animals, plants and occasionally written statements.
Regardless of the narrative told in her painting, her face
is always shown serene. Her work exhibits her pain, her
up-and-down love affair with Diego Rivera, her
wandering and intense sexuality and her self-deprecating
humor; always encaged inside an exterior image that is
self-controlled and stoic. Frieda Kahlo’s profusion of self-
imaging and outpouring of her emotions and
contradictions has at times been interpreted as a display
of narcissism and self-absorption. On this point she said:
‘‘I paint self-portraits because I am so often alone,
because I am the person I know best.’’ In fact she started
painting when she was 18 years old, recovering from the
multiple trauma of the streetcar crush in a full body cast,
when her mother brought to her a lap easel and paints.
It was then, with the help of a mirror, that she began
doing self-portraits.
The title of this painting ‘‘Broken Column’’ derives from
the Spanish term for the spine: Columna Vertebral. In
a surrealistic expression her body is split open at the
front to reveal a crumbling Ionic column - an allegory
for the multiple fractures she had in the spine, pelvis and
extremities - that stands in place only by the help of
a bracing metal corset. The iron nails that pierce her skin
signify pain. The barren land of Mexico in the
background is also cracked, like her body and devoid of
growth. Her face - irrespective of the silent tears – is
controlled and stoic, without grimace or expression. As
always, she tends to exaggerate rather than mask her
trademark thick eyebrows and upper lip hair.
Although the Surrealist gurus such as Andre Breton and
Marcel Duchamp were pleased to count her within their
movement, Kahlo never felt as one of them. She did not
share their self-indulgent trips of imagination. She rather
created allegory and stories using symbols from Mexican
popular art. These included many forms existing in
popular Mexican art: from the Virgins and Madonnas of
Christian mythology to the pre-Columbian art of the
Aztec. Her contribution to the definition and exaltation
of her country’s soul is surely as important as that of any
Mexican artist.
R. Berguer