70 years on from the death of Frida Kahlo, Carla Passino takes a look at the work and life of the trailblazing artist. Seventy years ago, on July 13, 1954, Mexican artist Frida Kahlo died, aged only 47. She had exhibited widely, but her contemporaries would have remembered her perhaps more for her tempestuous marriage to one of Mexico’s pre-eminent artists, Diego Rivera — they cheated on each other multiple times, divorced and remarried — than for her art.

Her work has since become hugely popular and her reputation now overshadows his. 1. Kahlo had been at school and destined to become a medic when a traffic accident changed her life.

It left permanent injuries, but also marked the start of her artistic career, as she began painting portraits during her recovery. Her chronic pain would shape her work throughout the rest of her life 2. Albeit of mixed heritage — her mother was Mexican, her father German — Kahlo drew heavily from the folk art of her native country.

She was also influenced by the work of her husband, twice her age and well established when they married. In her art, she examined the traditional role expected of her and her own unconventional life 3. A miscarriage in 1932 was another source of artistic reflection, prompting works that explored the female body.

With so much of her art anchored in her own experience, she rejected the Surrealism label bestowed on her by an impressed André Breton, saying: ‘I never painted my dreams, I painted my own real.