Frida Kahlo was born on July 6, 1907, in Coyoacán, on the outskirts of Mexico City — though she would later claim she was born in 1910, so people would associate her directly with the Mexican Revolution. Even her birth year was a self-portrait. She contracted polio at six, which left her right leg permanently thinner than her left.
She grew up during the Revolution, with gunfire in the streets of her neighborhood. By 1922, she was one of only 35 girls admitted to the elite National Preparatory School in Mexico City, out of 2,000 students. She planned to study medicine.
Then came September 17, 1925. She was eighteen. She and her boyfriend, Alejandro Gómez Arias, boarded a bus home from school. She had missed an earlier one because she couldn't find her umbrella. The bus collided with an electric streetcar. A steel handrail tore loose and impaled her through the abdomen — entering at the left hip and exiting through her genitals. Her spine was broken in three places. Her pelvis fractured in three places. Her collarbone broke. Two ribs broke. Her right leg suffered eleven fractures. Her right foot was crushed. Her left shoulder was dislocated. A fellow passenger had been carrying a packet of powdered gold, which burst in the crash and covered her naked, bleeding body. Her boyfriend, barely injured, found her and heard her scream when another passenger pulled the handrail out of her body. Doctors didn't expect her to survive the first surgery.
She survived more than thirty. She was encased in a full-body plaster cast. She was bedridden for months, then years, then — in varying degrees — for the rest of her life. Her parents gave her paintbrushes and oils and had a special easel built so she could paint lying down. Her mother hung a mirror from the canopy above her bed.
And so Frida Kahlo began painting self-portraits — not from artistic philosophy but from physical constraint. The mirror above her bed was the only subject available. "I paint myself because I am so often alone," she said, "and because I am the subject I know best." She created 143 paintings in her lifetime. Fifty-five were self-portraits.
In 1928, she brought her work to Diego Rivera — Mexico's most famous muralist, twenty-one years her senior. They married in 1929. Her parents called it "the marriage between an elephant and a dove." Kahlo later said: "There have been two great accidents in my life. One was the trolley, the other was Diego. Diego was by far the worst." Their marriage was a public spectacle of mutual genius, mutual infidelity, and mutual destruction. Rivera had an affair with Kahlo's younger sister Cristina. Kahlo had affairs with men and women — including Leon Trotsky, the exiled Russian revolutionary, who lived in the Blue House under Kahlo and Rivera's protection before being assassinated nearby.
They divorced in 1939. They remarried in 1940.Meanwhile, Kahlo was painting. Her work fused Mexican folk art, pre-Columbian imagery, and unflinching autobiography into something that had no precedent. She painted miscarriages, surgical scars, broken spines, her body split open. André Breton called her a surrealist. She rejected the label: "I never painted dreams. I painted my own reality."
In 1939, the Louvre purchased one of her paintings — making her the first twentieth-century Mexican artist in their collection. But during her lifetime, she was known primarily as Rivera's wife. In 1953, her right leg was amputated below the knee due to gangrene. She wrote in her diary: "Feet, what do I need them for, if I have wings to fly."
She died on July 13, 1954, seven days after her forty-seventh birthday. The official cause was pulmonary embolism. Some biographers believe it was suicide. Her final diary entry read: "I hope the exit is joyful — and I hope never to return."
For a generation after her death, her legacy went into eclipse. Rivera sold most of his and her remaining work to his patron, and the art world moved on. Then, in the late 1960s and 1970s, Chicana artists along the U.S.-Mexico border rediscovered her — recognizing in her work a fierce articulation of hybrid identity, cultural pride, and female experience.
In 1983, art historian Hayden Herrera published a biography that became an international bestseller, and the phenomenon now known as "Fridamania" began. In 1984, Mexico declared her works national cultural heritage. In 2002, Salma Hayek starred in an Oscar-winning film about her life. Her self-portrait The Dream sold at auction for $54.7 million — the most expensive work by a female artist ever sold
.Today her face appears on currency, tote bags, murals, and museum walls on every continent. The Blue House in Coyoacán — where she was raised, where she painted, where Trotsky slept, where she died — draws more visitors than any other museum in Mexico.
She was a Communist, a bisexual icon, a disabled woman who painted her own pain with colors so bright they burned. She made 143 paintings. The world couldn't look away from any of them. All because on a rainy afternoon in 1925, an eighteen-year-old girl couldn't find her umbrella and took the next bus instead
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