
Frida Kahlo: The Still Lifes
by Hayden Herrera, Salomon Grimberg
- Tytuł oryginalny
- Atomic Habits
- Język oryginału
- Angielski
- Liczba stron
- 320
- Wydawnictwo
- Avery
O tej książce
The Mexican painter Frida Kahlo (1907-1954) is considered to be one of the greatest women artists of all time, and her vibrantly colorful work remains hugely popular today. She is best known for her striking self-portraits, through which she depicted her psychological and physical pain after an accident at the age of eighteen left her disabled and unable to bear children. Until now, Kahlo's remarkable still lifes - of which she completed about forty, compared to eighty or so self-portraits - have not been subjected to close scrutiny, despite the fact that they comprised a major part of her creative output.In this groundbreaking study, Kahlo scholar Salomon Grimberg explores in detail all of the artist's documented still lifes, including some that have come to light only recently. Grimberg, a psychiatrist as well as an art historian, offers provocative new perspectives on Kahlo's creative process, and shows how her still lifes both complement her famous self-portraits and serve to reveal her true self. Full of symbolic imagery drawn from pre-Hispanic Mexico and other cultures and belief systems, these stunning works are illustrative of Kahlo's private musings about herself - her loneliness and her preoccupation with death - and the world around her. With beautiful reproductions of all the still lifes, as well as other relevant paintings and drawings by Kahlo and personal photographs, this compelling book is indispensable to understanding the dramatic life and work of an extraordinary woman.
Więcej od Hayden Herrera
Frida Kahlo: Song of Herself
Hayden Herrera, Salomon Grimberg
Lola Alvarez Bravo: The Frida Kahlo Photographs
Lola Álvarez Bravo, Salomon Grimberg, Society of Friends of Mexican Culture
Arshile Gorky: His Life and Work
Arshile Gorky, Hayden Herrera, Jonathan D. Lippincott
Frida Kahlo, 1910-1954: An Exhibition Organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago
Frida Kahlo