Frida Kalho: the look of cinema

The film biography titled Frida [2002] produced by the American director and director Julie Taymor, relates the life of the Mexican painter whilebeing inspired mainly by the book which devoted Hayden Herrera to him. It recounts the tumultuous life of the artist since his young student life,his accid...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Scotto Di Vettimo, Delphine
Format: Online
Language:spa
Published: Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios sobre Cultura y Sociedad 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/eticaycine/article/view/29224
Description
Summary:The film biography titled Frida [2002] produced by the American director and director Julie Taymor, relates the life of the Mexican painter whilebeing inspired mainly by the book which devoted Hayden Herrera to him. It recounts the tumultuous life of the artist since his young student life,his accident and his passionate relationship with the muralist Diego Rivera.Numerous references to Frida Kahlo’s paintings are included in the scenography and recall the richness and complexity of her work: more than onehundred and forty paintings, of which fifty are self-portraits, which come in different themes: politics, Mexicanism, love, nature, suffering, femininity or even death.It is from the analysis of a particular scene [which galvanizes the radicality of the abortion test and offers a framework for the expression of the temporality specific to this event, which I qualify as traumatic] that this article, which stands at the crossroads of cinema and psychoanalysis, explains adecisive stage in the creative process in Frida Kahlo.Here, the examination of the dialectic between creative process and trauma, allows us to grasp, in the nascent state, the implementation of modes ofpictorial creation which sign a new temporality in his pictorial art.Beyond that, the challenge of the biopic is to succeed on the one hand in weaving, modeling, staging and images the life of this extraordinary artist;and on the other hand to allow the spectator to discover the entanglement between the creative subjectivity of the artist and his work.