About this product
Arms crossed, flower in her hair, looking at you like you interrupted something. The halftone portrait of Frida Kahlo sits center-chest on deep chocolate brown, rendered in terracotta and rust — warm tones that belong to Coyoacán's walls, to the Casa Azul's courtyard, to the palette she kept returning to across thirty years of painting. "KAHLO" runs above in wide gold block letters, clean and unweathered — the name needs no distress to carry weight. Below: "COYOACÁN, MEXICO – OCTOBER 1939 / PAIN & POWER TOUR" in stacked serif caps, gold-toned and level.
October 1939 is the year she returned from Paris, refused the Surrealist label to her face, and watched her marriage to Rivera dissolve — all while finishing paintings. The posture in this image — arms folded, gaze direct — is not performance. It's the default setting of someone who had been painting through physical pain since she was eighteen and had stopped explaining herself to anyone. Poetas Y Punks mark at the neckline. 4.2 oz Airlume combed ring-spun cotton, retail fit.