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Thursday, December 26, 2024 |
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Photographic record of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo's wardrobe and belongings opens at Michael Hoppen Gallery |
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Frida by Ishiuchi #50, 2012-2015. © Ishiuchi Miyako. Courtesy Michael Hoppen Gallery.
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LONDON.- Frida by Ishiuchi Miyako (2013) is a photographic record of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo's wardrobe and belongings. Following Kahlo's death in 1954 her husband Diego Riviera began placing her personal effects into the bathroom of their Mexico City house, "The Blue House", which later became the Museo Frida Kahlo. Riviera gave instructions that this room should remain sealed until fifteen years after his death and it in fact remained unopened until 2004 when the museum decided to organise and catalogue the contents. Ishiuchi Miyako was invited to photograph these artefacts, over 300 unseen relics of Kahlo's life.
As a project Frida is both a departure from Ishiuchi Miyako's normal practice and a natural conceptual progression. While moving away from the Japanese subject matter of her earlier series, the work reveals Ishiuchi Miyako's continued obsession with the traces we leave behind both as individuals and as a society. In her earlier series, Mother's (2000-2005) and ひろしま/ Hiroshima (2007-), she photographed previously worn garments, evoking the lives and memories of the people who wore them as well as the social climate of post-war Japan. In documenting Frida, Ishiuchi Miyako again respectfully sifts through the ephemera left behind by an individual and in doing so makes intimate revelations about one of the twentieth century's greatest artists. Frida Kahlo (1907 -1954) was an invalid throughout her life. Having contracted polio as a child she was then involved in a near fatal bus accident at the age of 18, which resulted in numerous surgical interventions. In the aftermath of her accident Khalo constructed her iconic wardrobe to camouflage her physical ailments. Ishiuchi Miyako's images document the traditional Tehuana dresses that both concealed the damage to her lower body and acted as a feminist salute to the matriarchal society from which they are derived. * Through her photographs Ishiuchi came to recognise the parallel between these traditional garments and the kimonos of her own country, an "ephipany" that is evident in the images themselves. Throughout the photographs there is a particular awareness, a tenderness that is inherent to a woman looking through another woman's intimate possessions. As she painstakingly catalogues the chic of Kahlo's sunglasses, the intimacy of her darned tights and the corsets that were to be the armature by which she survived.
Many friends noted that the more incapacitated Kahlo became the more elaborate her costumes. Throughout her life she decorated her casts and corsets elevating them from medical necessities to visual armour. The final blow was the amputation of her leg in 1953, from which she never recovered. Even in this affliction she designed a prosthetic leg adorned with a boot covered in chinese embroidery and a little bell. Captured in natural light with a 35mm Nikon, Ishiuchi Miyako's portrayal of these objects can seem deceptively simple. Reviewed together however these relics become a composite "portrait", an insight into a woman who used fashion to channel her physical difficulties into a courageous statement of identity, strength and beauty.
Ishiuchi Miyako knew very little of Frida Kahlo, the artist, when she arrived in Mexico. She came to know her through her photographs, obsessing over the traces that Kahlo as a woman left on her belongings; the paint stains and stitching which bear the imprint of their owner. There are echoes of her past projects throughout, the same focus cast on the puckered darning of Frida's wardrobe as previously seen in her documentation of her mother's scars prior to her death. Flesh or fabric the scars are the same, in Ishiuchi Miyako's own words she is drawn to them "because they are so much like a photograph
They are visible events recorded in the past". As in her previous work the power of the portrait that emerges lies in the absence of the subject. The images reflect the viewer, acknowledging the fragile traces we all impart upon our environment and belongings.
All prints are for sale, enquiries should be directed to: gallery@michaelhoppengallery.com
* This information references the exhibition "Appearances Can be Deceiving: The Dresses of Frida Kahlo" curated by Circe Henestrosa. The exhibition proposes Kahlo's construction of identity through disability and ethnicity and was presented at the Frida Kahlo Museum in 2012. Henestrosa invited Ishiuchi Miyako to document this intimate archive at the Frida Kahlo Museum in Mexico City, This collection of photographs is the result of that work.
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Today's News
May 15, 2015
Roof Garden installation by French artist Pierre Huyghe opens at Metropolitan Museum
Quartet of flower paintings, two of irises, two of roses, by Van Gogh on view at the Metropolitan
Met Museum and National Gallery of Art acquire significant works by Aaron Douglas
Christie's Evening Sale of Impressionist and Modern Art realizes $202,608,000
New paintings and photography by British artist David Hockney go on show in London
Scottsdale Auctions & Appraisals announces Native American, Photos, Fine Art and Asian Antiquities sale
Christie's Post-War and Contemporaru Art Evening Sale achieves $658,532,000
Exhibition of rarely or never-before-seen early paintings by Michael Heizer opens at Gagosian
Photographic record of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo's wardrobe and belongings opens at Michael Hoppen Gallery
Exhibition highlights radical Modernist movements in Russian and German art during the early twentieth century
'Marcel Dzama: Mischief Makes a Move' opens at the World Chess Hall of Fame in St. Louis
Nohra Haime Gallery opens Carlos Rojas' first retrospective exhibition in New York
Art expert and appraiser Lark Mason named new Chairman of Asia Week New York
Important bust of John F. Kennedy features at Bonhams
Exhibition of sculptures by Thomas Houseago opens at Gagosian
Mick Peter creates a monumental cartoon-like illustration for new commision at Tramway
Bonhams to sell contents of historic French chateau
Jessie Edelman's first solo show with Robert Blumenthal Gallery opens in New York
Art Basel's Unlimited to present 74 ambitious and large-scale works spanning five decades
Rashid Johnson's new site-specific sculpture debuts on the High Line
UNESCO chief appeals for sparing Palmyra from Syria fighting
John Paul II's blood-stained cassock on display 34 years after shooting
Strong demand for Pop-Art and Op-Art at Bonhams Post-War and Contemporary Sale
Patek Philippe once owned by Eric Clapton sells for US$ 438,602 at Sotheby's Geneva watch sale
Jonathan A. Olsoff named Worldwide General Counsel and Corporate Secretary at Sotheby's
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