Frida Kahlo: Bettmann Archives/Getty Images.
Frida Kahlo and one of her pet monkeys
Frida Kahlo (FREE-dah KAH-loh) dreamed of becoming a doctor. As a child, she contracted polio, a disease that deformed her right leg. Inspired by the doctors who saved her, she hoped to someday provide medical care for others. But polio was just the first of many hardships Kahlo would face in her life.
When she became an artist as a young woman, Kahlo worked independently and developed her own artistic language. Members of the Surrealist group claimed her as one of their own when they saw her strange, emotional paintings, saying her work embodied Surrealism’s key ideas. But unlike the other Surrealists, Kahlo said that she didn’t “paint dreams or nightmares.” Instead, her suffering moved her to explore symbols of pain, painting her “own reality.”
Frida Kahlo (FREE-dah KAHL-loh) wanted to be a doctor. As a child, she had polio. This disease deformed her right leg. Kahlo hoped to help others in the same way doctors helped her. But troubles in her life would change her path.
Kahlo became an artist as a young woman. She was an independent artist. She developed a style different from other artists of her time. Members of the Surrealist group believed that her strange paintings fit with Surrealism’s ideas. But Kahlo disagreed. She said she didn’t “paint dreams or nightmares.” She painted her “own reality.”