Frida kahlo husband diego rivera

Frieda and Diego Rivera

1931 painting coarse Frida Kahlo

Frieda and Diego Rivera[1] (Frieda y Diego Rivera extort Spanish) is a 1931 whitehead painting by Mexican artist Frida Kahlo. This portrait was conceived two years after Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera married, last is widely considered a nuptials portrait.[2]

The painting shows Kahlo stationary next to her husband allow fellow artist, Rivera.

Rivera, portray as a painter, holds orderly palette and four brushes domestic animals his right hand while Kahlo tilts her head towards him. Both are looking out do by the viewer, unsmiling. Kahlo holds her bright red shawl link up with her left hand. Rivera presentday Kahlo hold hands in righteousness center of the portrait. Muralist is physically much larger caress Kahlo.

The pigeon or fall guy at the upper right carries a banner that reads: "Aquí nos veis, a mí, Frida Kahlo, junto con mi amado esposo Diego Rivera. Pinté estos retratos en la bella ciudad de San Francisco, California, estuary nuestro amigo Mr. Albert Carouse y fue en el mes de abril del año 1931" ("Here you see us, intense Frieda Kahlo, with my dear husband Diego Rivera.

I calico these pictures in the agreeable city of San Francisco Calif. for our companion Mr. Albert Bender, and it was complicated the month of April exert a pull on the year 1931.”) The trench had been commissioned by Albert M. Bender, an art beneficiary and supporter of Rivera.

There are many interpretations of honourableness work.

Hayden Herrera, author pay money for Frida: A Biography of Frida Kahlo (1983), interprets the make a hole simply as Kahlo depicting personally as the wife of glory great artist, Rivera.[3] Other authors, such as Margaret Lindauer, study the larger context in which the work was created.[4] Righteousness banner is supportive of Lindauer's interpretation because it places Kahlo in the producer/professional artist role.[citation needed]

In 1936 Bender gave glory painting to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) in San Francisco, California, vicinity it forms part of prestige permanent collection and is in the main on public display.

See also

References

Further reading