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"People credit her father with the fact that she was as strong a woman as she was, but it’s possible that her mother was also in large part responsible for that," Stieber says. "Her mother ran the household."
The letters track a particularly emotional time in Kahlo's relationship with her mother, as they coincide with her mother's declining health. Stieber believes the NMWA collection has the last letter Kahlo's mother ever wrote to her, where she describes how wonderful it had been to talk on the telephone—the first time she had spoken on the phone in her life.
Regardless of the problems Kahlo may have been facing, her letters reveal a love of life that never faltered. "The thing that really struck me was how much this artist enjoyed life and lived life to the fullest," Estrada says. "She was just vivacious and articulate and engaged with her environment, with people, with lovers, with friends, with family. She communicated and she did so with passion in her heart, not just in her artwork, but in her relationships with people."
Julia Kaganskiy is a freelance writer in Boston, Massachusetts.


Comments
i really love Frida's art and i would really like to buy one
Posted by timpist on November 29,2007 | 05:00PM
I own a 3' by 3' original painting 1948 depicting still life with a tree looking like a volcano. Can you tell me what this is worth for insurance purposes.
Posted by Lucille G. Legato, Ph.D. on February 1,2008 | 09:34AM
I think that this story was good and i feel sad about what happend to Frida Kahlo
Posted by Natasha on March 11,2008 | 04:22PM
Im doing an essay on her. Shes awesome
Posted by Amber on March 27,2008 | 08:39AM
I am doing a project on her, and i have to BE her for the class. and yes she is interesting but some of the things she paints are a little creepy and disturbing in my taste. but then again she did have a bit of a tragic life i guess:/
Posted by Jessica on May 29,2008 | 06:14PM
i am also doing a project on her too and i have to have a 3-5 pages and i also have to do an outline
Posted by Valerie on June 1,2008 | 04:47PM
I am about to finish a book on Frida, based in the private comments that Diego Rivera was telling to an uncle of mine, who was a close friend of Diego, from 1929 to 1957, year of Diego´s death. He was also a painter and sculptor, from the same Art School in México City. Of course this story relates the intimacy of that couple and all the controversy that on his side brought fame and richess and her´s sickness, surgeries, immense pain, jealousy frustration and sorrow. They were both bright and sensitive artists, living simultaneously, two ways of life. The public one, socially happy and the other private and miserable. I am hopping to have this book finished by September 2008, to hit libraries soon after. It already has a name: "That Brute Stone" Please let me know if this theme is interesting to you. Cordially, Rafael Ramirez.
Posted by rafael on July 10,2008 | 02:03PM
I'm also doing an essay on her. It's true, her life was not easy. I could say she had an even more difficult life than someone born into poverty... she sounds like a very strong willed woman.
Posted by Iriana on September 28,2008 | 07:14AM
frida kahlo was a very talented artist who has inspired me to do a feature artical on her in my art class fo my art assignment
Posted by Samantha on October 12,2008 | 03:24AM
I am also writing an essay on her for my comp class. She is such an inspiration.
Posted by Hallye on November 2,2008 | 11:14AM
I am bemused by Mrs. Rivera's noteriety. My daughter's math book mentions her along with Rembrandt, Van Gogh and Goya. Do they actually mean to intimate she had an equivalent talent? No, of course not. Did she have equivalent fame (a very different quality)? Perhaps, if feminism succeeds is pushing and hauling her thin accomplishments in to the limelight.
Posted by Poppa150 on January 30,2009 | 02:54PM
Appreciation for Frida Kahlo when I was a student in Mexico City and visited her blue house in the lovely neighborhood of Coyoacan led me to her studio in San Angel where I discovered a book about Diego Rivera's first wife, Angeline Beloff. "Memorias" tells of her years struggling to produce art and make a living in Paris while caring for the quixotic Rivera. That memoir inspired the newly released work: "House on the Bridge: Ten Turbulent Years with Diego Rivera" Given 4 stars by Top Amazon Reviewer Luan Gaines
Posted by sharon upp on March 25,2009 | 08:30AM
I read "House on the Bridge: Ten Turbulent Years with Diego Rivera" and I recommend it. Her descriptions of Mexico as well as Paris are lyrical. A must read.
Posted by Elise on May 24,2009 | 03:41PM