“I love you more than my own skin and even though you don't love me the same way, you love me anyways, don't you? And if you don't, I'll always have the hope that you do, and i'm satisfied with that. Love me a little. I adore you.”

—Frida Kahlo

Frida Kahlo's Closet is Opened 58 years After Her Death

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Frida circa 1926, photo taken by her dad Guillermo.

By DIANA OLIVA CAVE

If you are a Frida Kahlo fan – and really, who isn’t – check out the new exhibit at the Frida Kahlo Museum in Mexico City.  It opened this past weekend and it takes us inside Frida’s long-locked closet.  

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“What is interesting, is that the Frida Kahlo venerated by American feminists is a very different Frida Kahlo to the one people learn about in Mexico, in the Chicano community. In her country, she is recognized as an important artist and a key figure in revolutionary politics of early 20th century Mexico. Her communist affiliations are made very clear. Her relationship with Trotsky is underscored. All her political activities with Diego Rivera are constantly emphasized. The connection between her art and her politics is always made. When Chicana artists became interested in Frida Kahlo in the ‘70s and started organizing homages, they made the connection between her artistic project and theirs because they too were searching for an aesthetic compliment to a political view that was radical and emancipatory. But when the Euro-American feminists latch onto Frida Kahlo in the early ‘80s and when the American mainstream caught on to her, she was transformed into a figure of suffering. I am very critical of that form of appropriation.”

—Coco Fusco on her Amerindians piece from 1992 with Guillermo Gómez-Peña

“¿Cuál es mi camino? ¿Esperarte? ¿Olvidarte? ¿Hacer lo que tú haces, ir de los brazos de uno y de otro, hoy dormir con alguien mañana con otro diferente?”

—Frida Kahlo.
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