By Artsy Editors
In the catalog introduction
to “Mirror Mirror,” a collection of rare vintage photographs taken of Frida
Kahlo by some of her era’s most prolific and respected photographers, the
critic and psychologist Salomon Grimberg writes of the various lenses cast at the
painter wherever she went. “As much, if not more, than any movie star in
Mexico,” he writes, she “was photographed and her photos nurtured the limelight
around her.”
The show, currently on view
at Bentley Gallery in Phoenix, brings together over 20 rare photographs of the
famed Mexican artist, images that taken together reveal obscure dimensions of
the artist’s legendary status—and her multifaceted public profile—during her
lifetime.
“Mirror Mirror” is also,
given Kahlo’s desirability as a subject, a catalog of the artists,
photographers, and intellectuals who gathered around Kahlo during her reign as
one of Mexico’s most luminary post-revolutionary figures. The collection
contains photographs both apparently candid (as in Lucienne Bloch’s coy Frida
Winking, 1933) and assiduously staged.Nikolas Muray’s portrait Frida Kahlo on
White Bench, New York (1939), shows the painter set in front of a carefully
constructed, fantastically formal floral background—in retrospect, an image of
ironic distance, given that at the time the photographer and his subject were
near the midpoint of an intense, decade-long love affair. Muray, a
Hungarian-American photographer and Olympic fencer, is only one of the many
famed artists to shoot the iconic Kahlo during her life.
Also on display are the
photographs of the aforementioned Lucienne Bloch, a muralist with close ties to
both Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera; she is thought to have captured the only
visual record of Rivera’s ill-fated and controversial Rockefeller Center
fresco, a mural that combatively depicted Lenin in a moment of intense
political debate on the merits of American capitalism. Imogen Cunningham, a
member of the California-based collective Group f/64 (which also counted Ansel
Adams among its ranks) is represented through her muted, elegant
black-and-white portrait, the tone of which runs refreshingly counter to
today’s more bombastic portrayals of Kahlo. In a number of images, the artist
is photographed near mirrors and in front of her own self-portraits, a nod to her
massively famous practice of self-representation, a tendency that was as much
about the creation of Kahlo’s self-image through symbolism as a display of her
raw skill as an artist.
https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-rare-photographs-of-frida-kahlo-shed-light-on-her-legendary-life?utm_medium=email&utm_source=11379107-newsletter-editorial-daily-11-26-17&utm_campaign=editorial&utm_content=st-
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