Museum keeper Ximena Gomez dresses a mannequin with an indigenous shirt known as a "huipil" and a skirt that belonged to late Mexican artist Frida Kahlo before putting it on exhibit at the Frida Kahlo ...
Director Carla Gutierrez wanted to give artist Frida Kahlo to the people, specifically the people of Mexico who call her an icon. Though Gutierrez herself is a Peruvian immigrant, as a woman from ...
Frida Kahlo proudly wore long skirts embroidered with colorful flowers, showing off her Mexican indigenous heritage but also hiding a body contorted by childhood polio and a horrific bus crash. The ...
There’s a new way to experience the work of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo. Art lovers making a pilgrimage to her hometown of Mexico City, where she lived at La Casa Azul with her husband, fellow artist ...
A historic photo of artist Frida Kahlo and exiled Russian leader Leon Trotsky has been returned to the place in Mexico where it was taken, thanks to an Orange County woman and family members in Mexico ...
A ceramic dog with a bowl growing out of its head holds a piece of yellow fruit, surrounded by a wide array of colorful citrus fruits and tropical melons. Dark and light seeds are exposed in a veiny ...
Frida Kahlo's dresses and other personal items on display in her Mexico home. Nov. 26, 2012— -- Imagine being in Frida Kahlo's childhood home and opening up a closet that has been locked for ...
It was the mid-1950s when artist Frida Kahlo's voice was last heard bouncing off the thick adobe walls of her beloved Casa Azul. Kahlo's voice, along with those of her family and friends, are long ...
It’s been eight long years since a major exhibition of Mexico’s great painter came to London. But in 2026, the Tate Modern ...
Two of the world's most iconic painters called Mexico City home. Ximena Jordan: "What makes [her] unique is that she was inspired by the popular art style, so she integrated in her works of art the ...
A new Barbie doll inspired by the famous Surrealist artist and feminist icon Frida Kahlo has been banned from sale in Mexico — and not because toymaker Mattel’s design omitted her famous unibrow.