Ingrid Hoey: ‘This serum reversed visible signs of sun damage on my skin’
Ingrid Hoey: ‘This serum reversed visible signs of sun damage on my skin’

IMAGE

Design coach Karen Douglas shares her tips for working with an architect
Design coach Karen Douglas shares her tips for working with an architect

Megan Burns

How to spot a scammer (according to someone who was actually scammed)
How to spot a scammer (according to someone who was actually scammed)

Sarah Finnan

Cillian Murphy’s book about empathy is essential reading for everyone
Cillian Murphy’s book about empathy is essential reading for everyone

Sarah Gill

Supper Club: Hot-smoked salmon rice and asparagus salad
Supper Club: Hot-smoked salmon rice and asparagus salad

Sarah Finnan

My Life in Culture: Actor Lucie-Mae Sumner
My Life in Culture: Actor Lucie-Mae Sumner

Sarah Finnan

Social Pictures: Sharon Corr debuts new Boots No7 Future Renew product
Social Pictures: Sharon Corr debuts new Boots No7 Future Renew product

IMAGE

Need to boost your productivity? Make a not-to-do list
Need to boost your productivity? Make a not-to-do list

Sinead Brady

IMAGE Interiors spring/summer is out now! Find out what’s inside…
IMAGE Interiors spring/summer is out now! Find out what’s inside…

Megan Burns

What you think parenting is like versus what it is actually like
What you think parenting is like versus what it is actually like

Amanda Cassidy

Image / Editorial

8 Glorious Quotes That Made Frida Kahlo My First Crush


By Sophie White
07th Jul 2017
8 Glorious Quotes That Made Frida Kahlo My First Crush

See More Photos
This week was Frida Kahlo’s birthday. Though she would’ve been 110 years old, her essence still seems as vital today as it did when she was alive.


Kahlo was my girl crush before girl crush was a thing. I discovered her when I was about 12. I loved drawing and painting and when I first saw Kahlo’s self portraits they made me realise how few self portraits by female artists I’d ever seen.

A man’s self portrait is the artist gracing us, lifting the curtain however briefly to provide a glimpse of his genius, while a woman’s self portrait is TMI. A thing to be tolerated.

Kahlo demanded more and in her lifetime she achieved it. International success, respect for her work that defied categorisation – she was often dubbed a surrealist but Kahlo herself disputed this, sexual liberation (she was bisexual and had many passionate affairs, as did her husband) and an equal status to her larger-than-life husband the celebrated muralist, Diego Rivera.

Kahlo was one of the most committed, single-minded individualists of the last century. She survived blows to her health and to her psyche and produced some of the strangest and most compelling work of the 20th century. She wore her femininity and her masculinity with a boldness that is sadly absent from many of our contemporary female icons. She famously rocked a monobrow and her clothes were half adornment and half medical device such were her physical needs after repeated injury and surgery. Now she is the ultimate icon?for anyone who’s ever?felt like an outsider.

“I used to think I was the strangest person in the world but then I thought there are so many people in the world, there must be someone just like me who feels bizarre and flawed in the same ways I do. I would imagine her, and imagine that she must be out there thinking of me, too. Well, I hope that if you are out there and read this and know that, yes, it’s true I’m here, and I’m just as strange as you.”