In Time of Lockdown: Reflections on Locks, Lockdown, Isolation

Page 93

Frida Kahlo: how isolation affected her art Madeleine Hornby (MM L6) Frida Kahlo was a Mexican artist from the early 20th century. She was most famous for her self-portraits, portraits and works inspired by Mexican culture. Frida was confined to her bed through illness for most of her childhood. Kahlo was born in Coyoacán, Mexico City, in 1907. Her father, Wilhelm, was a photographer and amateur painter. Her father was a German immigrant, and her mother was half Amerindian and half Spanish. Frida had two older sisters and one younger. In 1922, she enrolled at the National Preparatory School, where she was one of the only 35 female students. Frida soon became well known for her outspokenness and bravery. At the National Preparatory School, she met her husband, Diego Riviera, the famous muralist. He was working on a mural called The Creation on the school campus. In 1928, she met Riviera again, and the next year they were married. For most of their marriage, they were separated and never had children, and this destroyed Frida. Much of her artwork depicts the pain and loneliness she experienced throughout her life. When she was only six, she contracted polio and was bedridden for nine months. Then in 1925, when she was only 18, she was involved in a terrible accident. She and her friend, Alejandro Gómez Arias, were travelling together on a bus when a vehicle collided with the bus. A street handrail went through her hip; she suffered several severe injuries to her pelvis and spine. As a result, she was bedridden again. After spending weeks in the hospital, she returned home to her father to recover. To pass the time, she took up painting. She initially borrowed paints and brushes from her father, and he made her an easel which could be used from her bed, and fixed a mirror above her bed so that she could paint portraits of herself as she lay in her bed flat with her body wrapped in plaster. In the last couple of years of her life, she was bedridden again. In 1950, after being diagnosed with gangrene in her right foot, and she spent nine months in hospital. Even during this time, she continued to paint. Then in 1953, her right leg was amputated to stop the spread of the disease. Of the 143 paintings Kahlo created in her short career, 55 of them were self-portraits. Frida painted herself so often because, for such a long time, she was alone, and therefore painting herself became the only subject she was really confident with. Many of Kahlo’s paintings reference the pain and isolation that she experienced. Over the next 20 years of her career, she depicted the frailty of the human body and decay with haunting poignancy. Kahlo’s Broken Column was painted shortly after she underwent spinal surgery, following her tragic accident when she was 18. She depicts herself bound and constrained by a cage-like brace around her body. A chunk of missing skin violates the integrity of her body, exposing her. Metal nails pierce her face and all over her body — tears stream down her face. Placed in a barren landscape, she is exposed in more ways than one. The emotional intensity that we experience when looking at this is what distinguishes her work. She dealt with her reality in her paintings, depicting the pain and isolation she shared her whole life. She is one of the most striking and extreme examples of an artist responding to isolation. Picture: https://www.dailyartmagazine.com/broken-column-frida-kahlo/

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Articles inside

The Individuality of Chivalric Culture

1hr
pages 125-158

Locks in Lockdown: depictions of Rapunzel in illustrated works from the Golden Age to the present

7min
pages 121-124

Die Winterreise – Schubert’s Lockdown

3min
page 120

Is an Element of Self-isolation Necessary for an Artist to be Successful?

6min
pages 97-98

Lessons on Loneliness from Homer’s Odyssey

17min
pages 111-116

Images for This Lockdown Publication: ‘I Feel Therefore I am

3min
pages 104-107

Locks and the Viennese Secession

7min
pages 99-101

Isolation in Shelley’s Frankenstein

4min
pages 117-118

Homeric Lockdowns

9min
pages 108-110

Isolation in Camus’ L’Étranger

3min
page 119

Isolation: a unique form of artistic liberation

9min
pages 94-96

Frida Kahlo – How isolation affected her art

2min
page 93

Isolation in ‘The Yellow Wallpaper

2min
page 92

Female Authors of the 19th Century ‘Locked Down’ under Male Pseudonyms

6min
pages 90-91

C)Ovid and Isolation

5min
pages 86-87

The Most Isolated Tribe in the World: The Sentinelese

4min
pages 81-83

PART 4: ARTISTS AND WRITERS ISOLATED

3min
pages 84-85

How Did Exile and Isolation Affect Dante’s ‘Divine Comedy’?

5min
pages 88-89

Exploring Symbiotic Relationships Between Isolated Settlements and their Surrounding Landscape

7min
pages 79-80

Apartheid: Isolation of Race

8min
pages 76-78

Isolation Cottages- How Social Distancing and Quarantine Helped our Ancestors Overcome Disease

8min
pages 65-69

Culture of Isolation in China

4min
pages 74-75

US Isolationism – selfish or selfless?

5min
pages 72-73

Early Quarantines

8min
pages 63-64

Japan’s Isolation Policy of Sakoku

5min
pages 70-71

Lockdowns and Isolations in Previous Pandemics

5min
pages 61-62

Bust and Boom: An Investigation Into the Economic Euphoria Following Times of Isolation or Lockdown

5min
pages 59-60

The Toll Imposed by Confinement on Introverts and Extroverts

2min
page 56

Property Through a Pandemic

5min
pages 57-58

How Religions Around the World have been Affected by Lockdown

3min
page 52

Archie Todd-Leask (C1 L6

4min
pages 54-55

Life in North Korea and Covid’s Effect on it

3min
pages 45-47

COVID-19 and Lockdown’s Impact on Neurological Functions and Mental Health 4

2min
page 53

PART 2: LOCKDOWNS AND QUARANTINES

12min
pages 48-51

How Has the Kim Dynasty Stayed in Power and What Will it Take to Topple it?

5min
pages 43-44

Nelson Mandela in Prison

6min
pages 32-33

Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement

4min
pages 34-35

Australia’s History as a Penal Colony

5min
pages 41-42

Isolation in Special Forces Selection

4min
pages 37-38

The Isolation of the Unidentified

5min
pages 39-40

White Torture

2min
page 36

Heroic Prisoners of Nazi Germany: the stories of Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Sophie Scholl

8min
pages 29-31

Was Hitler’s Year in Prison his Key to Power?

3min
pages 27-28

Master’s Foreword

1min
page 9

Staff Editorial

3min
pages 11-13

The History and Design of the Lock and Key

4min
pages 14-15

Prisons: Mental or Physical?

8min
pages 17-19

The Myth of Medieval Dungeons

16min
pages 22-26

Pupil Editorial

1min
page 10

Evolution of Prisons

6min
pages 20-21

What Makes a Strong Password?

2min
page 16
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