Frida paint
Priscilla Bueno
September 22, 2017
Throughout the history of humanity, Art has played an
important role in our societies. Art is
defined as “something that is created with imagination and skill and that is
beautiful or that expresses important ideas or feelings: works created by
artists: paintings, sculptures, etc. “There are quite a few art periods and to
enumerate just a few: Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Romanticism, Academic,
Impressionism, Surrealism (from 1920) …etc. During my visit at MOMA, I have
admired some beautiful paintings from different artists, different periods. One
of the paintings from Frida Kahlo caught my attention “My Grandparents, My
Parents, and I (Family Tree). By
researching let’s see how Frida’s painting reflects the art period that she
lived, the ideas and feelings that she was expressing, an artist of the
Surrealism art period.
Frida was born in Mexico; her father was a German
photographer who migrated to Mexico and married her mother Matilde. At the age of 6, she had polio but she
recovered from the illness that left her slightly crippled. Later, she was involved in a car accident
that left her infertile. She was a very
intelligent, she became a political activist and her oil paintings contributed
to her fame. In her art work, her
emotions, her pain, her opposition can be felt. Some considered her art as
controversial. By reading the label of
the painting mentioned above, one can understand why the artist choose to
express her views, her emotions through some non-verbal manner in favor of
imagery: “While Kahlo celebrated Mexican culture by invoking its traditions in
her art and wearing elaborate traditional attire, this painting is as much a
tribute to her European and Jewish heritage. On the right are her German-born
Jewish father and his parents, symbolized by the sea, and on the left her
Mexican mother and her parents, symbolized by the land and a faintly rendered
map of Mexico that appears above her grandparents’ heads. Kahlo was fluent in
German and closely monitored the rise of Nazism in Europe. She made this
painting shortly after Hitler passed the Nuremberg laws, forbidding interracial
marriage. While the painting adopts the format of genealogical charts used by
the Nazis to advocate racial purity, Kahlo uses it subversively to affirm her
mixed origins”
The dramatic life of Frida is reflected on all her art work,
her illness, her handicap, her emotions all contributed to some of the
provocative images that she had produced through her paintings. Some of her works were more challenging than
others; Critics even characterized some of them as controversial. The surrealism art period was a movement
where Artists employed fantasy and dream imagery, “artists created works in a
variety of Medias that exposed their inner minds in eccentric, symbolic ways,
uncovering anxieties and treating them analytically through visual means”. By analyzing the period that the artist lived
in, one can easily understand how harsh life was for a woman, handicapped,
married, divorced then remarried. In
that period society wanted a woman to be pretty, submissive and a mother. She had to face this constant gender
struggle; she chooses to overcome these obstacles by using Art through her
paintings and expressing her inner thoughts.
Kahlo also used her Art to bring attention to the
mistreatment of women and to aid the feminist movement. “She taught painting to
youth across Mexico, affecting hundreds of lives with her mentorship. In her
final days she left the hospital, despite doctors’ orders, to participate in a
political protest. She was in a wheelchair, having lost a leg to gangrene,
sickly thin, with colorful yarn tied into her hair. The things she saw and
experienced led to the dramatic works that flowed from her brush”.
In my thought I feel she express their feelings, their
emotions, their happiness, their sorrow either through paintings or sculptures
… Researchers have found evidence that humans evolved to be moved by art. Frida
Kahlo is no exception, she used Art to promote awareness using different
techniques and manners that were appropriate during that moment and conform to
the art movement “Surrealism”. As
humans, our emotions, our passions, our feelings can guide us and can help us
make a difference. Art can be considered as a form of communication to denounce
what is unjust, to show acceptance, to expose the beauty of our world.
What really affect me about Frida paint is the less interest
many people give to that paint at the museum and how people sometimes don’t care
even who was her. Is like nobody cares and when I was watching it one of the
guys who went with the group he say the why you care don’t go and watch Latin art
check Van Gogh “the starry night” that’s where the all group are. When I turn
to see my mate and my face say everything without a word. That day he feel the
anger of me because he not supposed to bother me, because the professor say to
see all art not only Van Gogh. After that day is like a nightmare because I see
him everywhere in the college and he knows I don’t like him for being a feeling
less.
Work cited:
www.moma.org/collection/works/78784
www.theartstory.org/movement-surrealism.htm
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.