I. Although she lived a short life she had a very eventful one.
a. Here’s Frida’s early life.
1. She was born on July 6, 1907 in Coyocoan, Mexico City, Mexico
2. She had german dad (photographer) and half Amerindian and half Spanish mother and also two older sisters and one younger sister.
3. Had very poor health in her childhood and contracted polio at age of 6 and had to be bedridden for nine months. The disease caused her right leg and foot to grow much thinner than her left one and as a result she only wore long skirts to cover it up
4. Her father (who was a major influencer in her life) encouraged her to do lots of sports to help her recover. She played soccer, went swimming, and even did wrestle, which is very unusual at that time for
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Luckily, Frida had such a passion in her painting, she often used it as a form of therapy, and as a result almost all her work contains symbolism that had a deep personal meaning to her.
a. Her struggles in
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"Kahlo painted herself as the quietly suffering female. In every possible sense, the mass-culture Kahlo embodies that now-poisonous term: victim-hood. She was the victim of patriarchal culture, victim of an unfaithful husband, and simply the victim of a horrific accident. But that's probably one reason why she's so popular.” "She dramatized the pain in her paintings, while carefully cultivating a self-image as a 'heroic sufferer.'" (Mencimer, 2002)
2. Between her emotional struggles, she also lived most of her life in pain because of her poor health, posture, and the permanent damage caused by her bus accident. A lot of her work shows mostly Frida herself suffering or being trapped or broken in some way.
3. Not only does she deal with pain, but she also deals with self image. She's constantly looking at herself through her self portraits.
4. Chadwick states: "...Kahlo's The Broken Column (1944)... reinforces the woman artist's use of the mirror to assert the duality of being, the self as observer and observed. ... Kahlo used painting as a means of exploring the reality of her own body as her consciousness of its vulnerability; in many cases the reality dissolves into a duality, exterior evidence versus interior perception of that reality." (Chadwick, 2007)
5.
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Aaliyah Mcrae some may think she’s just another student at Manchester Regional High School and although she is a student,there is a lot more to her than you think. She has been a four year varsity basketball player. Some may ask, How is she’s so good?
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Did you know that although Wilma Rudolph is known as an olympian she was also a civil rights activist in the 1960s and was also a major survivor! Wilma Rudolph’s life began with many health issues. One of the worst illnesses she overcame was polio. This disease caused her legs to form into the shape of a C. She could not even go to school because of her polio. In fact only few doctors would help her because of her skin color according to Bud Greenspan of ESPN.org ‘’ People did not want to help her.’’
The animals in the paintings include a cat (signifies on being catty), a monkey (substitute for children she could not have), a butterfly (transformation), and her thorn necklace that pierced her flesh (shows suffering). These animals and objects created a spotlight on her emotional and physical pain throughout her life. Such as these events that we are able to discover in Frida Kahlo ’s artwork, metaphors are used to fill semantic gaps when new concepts emerge, just like how it is being used within science. When an image gets produced, it becomes a reference point for other images and the meaning will change according to how the individual will view it.
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This is a critical analysis of the painting Henry Ford Hospital by Frida Kahlo. This artwork consists of oil paint on a tin canvas. It was painted in Detroit, Michigan after she had one of her many miscarriages. Today it can be found in the Collection of Museo Dolores Olmedo in Xochimilco, Mexico (Esaak). This analysis will describe the elements of design, principles of design, and the reason Kahlo created this artwork.
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