Touting churro-spiced lattes in its espresso bar and an expanded
Frank Restaurant margarita menu, the Art Gallery of Ontario launches the
exhibition “Frida & Diego: Passion, Politics & Painting” with
great tie-in fanfare today.
Featuring more than 80 works by Frida
Kahlo and Diego Rivera and more than 60 photographs of them by other
artists, the exhibition’s stated aim is to show how their paintings
reflect the dramatic story of their lives together and their artistic
commitment to the politics of 1930s, 1940s and 1950s Mexico.
Frida & Diego contains several
not-to-be-missed masterpieces (see sidebar for a few). But I wasn’t
convinced that the show succeeds in providing an accurate sense of Frida
and Diego’s lives together — or of their politics, either.
The exhibition opens with a large
photograph of the couple embracing in San Francisco in 1931, as well as
some small portraits and self-portraits.
Next comes Rivera’s early European
works — including some Cubist paintings in the style of his Paris-days
friend Picasso. Then, there’s a display about the overtly politicized
murals and paintings Rivera’s best known for, including one where Kahlo
hands out arms to the Mexican people. From there, Kahlo’s early years and some of her paintings — such as 1932’s A Few Small Nips, her fingerprints visible on the frame — are shown before viewers enter a room where works by both artists hang together.
In many ways, this room’s a must-see, as it’s rare to see Riveras and Kahlos displayed side by side. However, it’s hard to know what
conclusions to draw from this display, as some earlier, less skilled
Kahlos are paired with more mature, assured Riveras. Perhaps this is
meant to balance the fact that a smaller proportion of Rivera’s career
is represented in the show — or the fact that Kahlo’s work tends to
surpass Rivera’s in integrating ambiguity and darkness, offering a
haunting complexity that’s made her beloved of so many more contemporary
viewers. (When they were alive, he was the star, not her.)
One thing I wish I had underlined in the review in retrospect was the way that the show's dependence on photographs of the artists—which is enriching in many ways—is also part of the difficulty I had with it.
In the end, I felt that the exhibition glossed over the complexity that must have been a huge part of Frida & Diego's relationship. While that complexity is well reflected in Frida's paintings, it is difficult to surmise from photographs of the artists—because betrayal, pain and separation in somebody else's relationship is a near-impossible thing to portray in photographs, unless you happen to be doing it embedded-photojournalism style. And even if you are embedded, say, how do you picture long periods of separation or strife between couples? It's much easier to capture at least a surface level of togetherness in straight photography; much more difficult to capture apartness.
In any case, many interesting works in this show... just wish the storytelling had aimed for more completeness or complexity—not that I think anyone's full sense of relationship or politics can be captured by an outsider decades later, but it would have been nice to aim higher.
(Image: A man takes a photo of a large portrait of 20th century Mexican artists Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera at the AGO, via the Toronto Star.)
"Review of Frida & Diego at the AGO in Saturday's Star"
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