FRIDA KAHLO: Portraits of an Icon
Margaret Hooks, Frida Kahlo, . . Turner, $65 (152pp) ISBN 978-84-7506-543-4
This is an entire book of photographic portraits of Kahlo, not paintings by Kahlo. And she is, from page to page, fascinating. The photographs themselves are beautiful. Sometimes sepia-toned and sometimes in grays, they are given full, sumptuous, captionless pages, and are expertly printed. Kahlo, the artist and self-proclaimed "great concealer," stares at the viewer, challenging or smug, flirtatious or sad—and always blazingly smart. Her work features in some of the backgrounds, as does artwork by Picasso or her spouse Diego Rivera. Often she holds an animal (a rabbit, a dog, a bird) like an attribute, appearing like a saint in a medieval icon painting. An array of pioneering photographers from the beginning of the 20th century made her portrait: Imogen Cunningham, Edward Weston, Manuel Álvarez Bravo, as did her lover Nickolas Murray, and her father, Guillermo Kahlo. Hooks (
Reviewed on: 02/24/2003
Genre: Nonfiction