Frida Kahlo: why is it always a valid icon?

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Take art documentaries to the movies. In this case, on art frida kahlo. This is the ambitious goal of the On Display project, a series of documentary films that, since 2011, examine the work of artists such as Edward Hopper, Paul Cézanne and Johannes Vermeer. With the collaboration of the world’s most important museums and galleries, the testimony of historians and art critics, and a technology that ensures that works are shown on the screen with the highest possible fidelity, these films explore the artistic legacy of important figures and are an alternative to purely informative documentary.

Distributor Acontracorriente, which previously brought other films in the series to theaters, The documentary ‘Frida Kahlo’ directed by Ali Ray, which examines the works of the famous Mexican artist in depth, will premiere in 50 theaters on May 29. while making connections with your life. A good way to understand the true significance and relevance of the artist, Its configuration as a pop icon has in many cases been spoken of in superficial and partial terms.. Not everything is colorful in his work, less colorful in his life.

It’s not Kahlo’s first appearance on the screen. The artist has been the subject of fictional films and documentaries. Most notable titles include ‘Frida, naturaleza viva’ (1983), a documentary directed by Mexican Paul Leduc, and most popularly, the fictional film ‘Frida’ (2002), a biography he directed with Julie Taymor and Salma. Hayek is like ‘Frida Kahlo’. Second, if he approached the artist freely and with a creative license, the documentary at hand asserts fidelity to his work, personal history and legacy.

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In Frida Kahlo, which is the most relevant part of the film, she aims to show how far the artist has gone and how important both her work and her personality are today. For many reasons. First, the way he envisions and works in first person, something the documentary deals with through a detailed examination of the artist’s self-portraits, the narrative of his difficult relationship with the painter Diego Rivera (and how he partially defines himself, how he defines himself in his life and paintings, like himself). (as opposed to that chubby figure) and the beautiful narration (in voice acting) of the correspondence between Frida Kahlo and her friends in which she tells them how she feels and who she thinks she is at every moment. of your life.

‘Frida Kahlo’ also builds bridges between the artist’s work and the present by talking about how she represents the body (especially women) in her works, how she shows what no one dares to show, and even her advanced approaches to gender fluidity. . The documentary tells the story of Frida Kahlo’s major heart problems, mostly due to her tumultuous relationship with Diego Rivera and her inability to become a mother.. But he also highlights that he has suffered a lot of physical pain. A terrible car accident in his youth devastated him, and he spent half his life in the operating room and the other half in bed. And given her delicate health, the abortions she had had also weakened her.

‘Frida Kahlo’ shows in an engraving how all this is in the artist’s work, daring to talk about one of her abortions at a time when no one else was doing it. (Abortion) or the Henry Ford Hospital depicting himself dying of blood loss in a bed from spontaneous abortion. Ali Ray’s documentary is a good way to understand why myths and icons are myths and icons.

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