DESCRIPTION
oil on metal
RIDA KAHLO
(1907-1954)
ROOTS
5,000,000—7,000,000 USD
Lot Sold. Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium: 5,616,000 USD
his work has been requested for the Frida Kahlo exhibition commemorating the 100th anniversary of her birth being organized by the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (in association with the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art). The exhibition will open in Mexico City (June-September, 2007) followed by a tour with stops in Minneapolis (October, 2007–January, 2008); Philadelphia (February–May, 2008) and San Francisco (June–September, 2008). A fully illustrated catalogue will be published in conjunction with the exhibition. Curated by Hayden Herrera and Elizabeth Carpenter.
Eduardo Morillo Safa, Mexico City
Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City
Acquired by the present owner (1982)
"The green miracle of the landscape of my body becomes in you the whole nature. I fly through it to caress the rounded hills with my fingertips, my hands sink into the shadowy valleys in an urge to possess and I'm enveloped in the embrace of gentle branches, green and cool. I penetrate the sex of the whole earth, her heat chars me and my entire body is rubbed by the freshness of the tender leaves."
"El milagro vegetal del paisaje de mi cuerpo es en ti la naturaleza entera. Yo la recorro en vuelo que acaricia con mis dedos los redondos cerros, penetran mis manos los inebrios valles en ansias de posesión y me cubre el abrazo de las ramas suaves, verdes y frescas. Yo penetro el sexo de la tierra entera, me abrasa su calor y en mi cuerpo todo roza las frescura de las hojas tiernas."
- Frida Kahlo
EXHIBITED
Chicago, Museum of Contemporary Art, January 13-March 5, 1978; La Jolla, Mandeville Art Gallery, University of California, April 7-May 17, 1978; Phoenix, Phoenix Art Museum, June 9-July 23, 1978; Austin, University Art Museum, The University of Texas, August 13-October 1, 1978; Houston, The Sarah Campbell Blaffer Gallery, University of Houston, October 14-November 19, 1978; Purchase, The Neuberger Museum, State University of New York, December 8, 1978-January 14, 1979; Frida Kahlo (1910-1954), n.n., p. 27, illustrated, p. 133
London, Whitechapel Art Gallery, March 26-May 2, 1982; Berlin, Haus am Waldsee, May 14-July 11, 1982; Hamburg, Kunstverein, July 29-September 12, 1982; Hannover, Kunstverein, September 26-November 7, 1982; Stockholm, Kulturhuset, November 19, 1982-January 30, 1983; New York, Grey Art Gallery, New York University, March 1-April 16, 1983, Frida Kahlo and Tina Modotti, n.n., p. 71, illustrated in color
Madrid, Salas Pablo Ruiz Picasso, Frida Kahlo (1907-1954), April 30-June 15, 1985, no. 22, p. 179, illustrated, p. 189
Indianapolis, Indianapolis Museum of Art, June 28-September 13, 1987; Flushing, The Queens Museum, October 10-December 6, 1987; Miami, Center for the Fine Arts, January 15-March 4, 1988; Mexico City, Centro Cultural Arte Contemporáneo, March 25-May 22, 1988; Art of the Fantastic: Latin America 1920-1987, no. 26, p. 287, illustrated in color, p. 87
Houston, The Museum of Fine Arts, The Private Eye: Selected Works from Collections of Friends of the Museum of Fine Arts, June 11-August 13, 1989, p. 107, illustrated in color, p. 69
Berkeley, University Art Museum, University of California at Berkeley, Anxious Visions: Surrealist Art, October 3-December 30, 1990, p. 286, illustrated in color, no. 79, p. 69
Antwerp, Royal Museum for the Arts, America, Bride of the Sun, 500 Years of Latin-America and the Netherlands, February 1-May 31, 1992, fig. b, p. 479, illustrated in color
Frankfurt, Schirn Kunsthalle, March 6-May 23, 1993; Houston, Museum of Fine Arts, June 6-August 29, 1993; The World of Frida Kahlo, no. 47, p. 267, illustrated in color, p. 133
Madrid, Sala de Exposiciones de la Fundación “la Caixa”, February 12-April 27, 1997; Barcelona, Centre Cultural de la Fundació “la Caixa”, May 14-July 27, 1997; Tarsila do Amaral, Frida Kahlo, Amelia Peláez, no. 42, p. 179, illustrated in color, p. 135
Switzerland, Martigny, Fondation Pierre Gianadda, Diego Rivera & Frida Kahlo, January 24-June 1, 1998, no. 22, p. 205, illustrated in color
Tokyo, The Bunkamura Museum of Art, July 19-September 7, 2003; Osaka, Suntory Museum, September 13-October 19, 2003; Nagoya, Nagoya City Art Museum, November 1-December 21, 2003; Kochi, The Museum of Art, January 4-February 22, 2004; Women Surrealists in Mexico, no. 33, p. 90, illustrated in color
London, Tate Modern, Frida Kahlo, June 9-October 9, 2005, n.n., p. 225, illustrated in color, pl. 50, p. 156, detail illustrated in color, fig. 100, p. 78
LITERATURE AND REFERENCES
Hayden Herrera, Frida: A Biography of Frida Kahlo, New York, Harper & Row Publishers, Inc., 1983, no. XXVII, p. 494, illustrated in color, p. 294
Rauda Jamis, Frida Kahlo, autoportrait d'une femme, Paris, Presses de la Renaissance, 1985, n.p., illustrated in color
Araceli Rico, Frida Kahlo, Fantasía de un cuerpo herido, Mexico, Plaza y Valdés Editores, 1987, p. 97, illustrated
Martha Zamora, Frida el pincel de la angustia, Mexico, Laboratorio Lito Color, 1987, p. 325, illustrated in color
Helga Prignitz-Poda, Salomón Grimberg and Andrea Kettenmann, Frida Kahlo, Das Gesamtwerk, Frankfurt, Verlag Neue Kritik, 1988, no. 88, p. 251, illustrated in color, p. 144
Leslie Sills, Inspirations, Stories about Women Artists, Georgia O'Keeffe, Frida Kahlo, Alice Neel, Faith Ringgold, Illinois, Albert Whitman & Company, 1989, no. 26, illustrated in color
The Seibu Museum of Art, Frida Kahlo, Tokyo, Nissha Printing Co., 1989, pl. 42, illustrated in color
Whitney Chadwick, Women Artists and the Surrealist Movement, New York, Thames and Hudson Inc., 1991, no. 132, p. 249, illustrated, p. 148
Hayden Herrera, Frida Kahlo: The Paintings, New York, Harper Collins, 1991, p. 92-93, illustrated in color
Edward J. Sullivan, "Frida Kahlo," and Janice Helland, "Frida Kahlo: The Politics of Confession," Latin American Art, December, 1991, p. 35, illustrated
Malka Drucker, Frida Kahlo, Albuquerque, University of New Mexico Press, 1991, p. 113, illustrated in color
Hayden Herrera, Frida Kahlo, New York, Rizzoli International Publications, Inc., 1992, pl. 10, illustrated in color, index to colorplates, twice illustrated in color
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Crosscurrents of Modernism: Four Latin American Pioneers, Washington, D.C., The Smithsonian Institution Press, 1992, fig. f, p. 33, illustrated
Robyn Montana Turner, Frida Kahlo, Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1993, p. 27, illustrated in color
Robin Richmond, Frida Kahlo in Mexico, San Francisco, Pomegranate Artbooks, 1994, p. 44-45, illustrated in color
Keto von Waberer, Frida Kahlo Masterpieces, New York, W.W. Norton, 1994, pl. 28, illustrated in color
Salomon Grimberg, Frida Kahlo, Greenwich, Brompton Books, 1997, p. 99, illustrated in color
Yolanda Crespo Díaz, Frida Kahlo Vida y Obra, Una Interpretación Psicológica de sus Diarios, Cartas y Obras, Panama, Editorial Portobelo, 1997, p. 26, illustrated
Isabel Alcántara and Sandra Egnolff, Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, Munich, Prestel Verlag, 1999, p. 78, illustrated in color
Sharyn Rohlfsen Udall, Carr, O’Keefe, Kahlo, Places of their Own, New Haven, Yale University Press, 2000, no. 105, p. 163, illustrated in color
Teresa del Conde, Frida Kahlo La pintora y el mito, Barcelona, Plaza & Janés Editores, 2001, pl. 7, illustrated
Gannit Ankori, Imaging Her Selves, Frida Kahlo's Poetics of Identity and Fragmentation, London, Greenwood Press, 2002, no. 50, illustrated
Helga Prignitz-Poda, Frida Kahlo, The Painter and Her Work, New York, Art Publishers Inc., 2004, p. 60, illustrated
OTHER SOURCE: Julie Taymor, Frida, 123 min., Los Angeles, Miramax Films, 2002, featured at the end
CATALOGUE NOTE
Roots, 1943, is one of Frida Kahlo’s least anguished and most beautiful self-portraits. Like its counterpart, My Nurse and I, 1937, it is a passionate expression of Kahlo’s deep identification with nature. In the earlier painting Frida is an infant suckling at her Mexican Indian wet nurse’s plant-like breast. From this earth mother, she imbibes not only her Indian heritage, but also the essence of her native land. In Roots, on the other hand, it is Frida who nourishes that land by giving birth to a vine. Curiously, given the painting’s title, the vine has no visible roots. It must, therefore, be rooted in Frida, but Frida, floating just above a barren landscape and painted in a much larger scale, is rootless, as in a dream.
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