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Frida Kahlo:
Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution |
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Frida Kahlo A warm, almost father-daughter relationship developed
between Kahlo and the prominent American collector and
art patron Chester Dale (1883-1962). Kahlo sold at least
one of her paintings to Dale and he may have paid for at
least one of her many operations. Included in his papers
are photographs from his trip to Mexico where he met
Kahlo and Rivera in the 1940s. Also found in Dale's
papers is a photograph taken in the studio of sculptor
Ralph Stackpole (1885-1973), who Rivera had known in
Paris. Stackpole, along with, William Gerstle, president
of the San Francisco Art Commission, helped Rivera secure
mural commissions in San Francisco in 1930. Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera in the studio of sculptor Ralph Stackpole, Montgomery Street, San Francisco, 1931. Photograph, b&w. 24 x 19 cm. Peter A. Juley & Son, photographer. Chester Dale papers, 1897-1971 (bulk 1950-1968). Archives of American Art. Original in: Peter A. Juley & Son Collection, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Smithsonian Institution. Frida Kahlo reclining on her bed, Coyoacán, Mexico, [between 1942 and 1945]. Photograph, b&w. 09 x 13 cm. Chester Dale papers, 1897-1971 (bulk 1950-1968). Archives of American Art. Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera reclining, Coyoacán, Mexico, [between 1942 and 1945]. Photograph, b&w. 09 x 13 cm. Chester Dale papers, 1897-1971 (bulk 1950-1968). Archives of American Art. Diego Rivera sitting by a Mexican ruin, [between 1942 and 1945]. Photograph, b&w. 09 x 13 cm. Chester Dale papers, 1897-1971 (bulk 1950-1968). Archives of American Art. Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera with Chester Dale, Coyoacán, Mexico, [between 1942 and 1945]. Photograph, b&w. 09 x 13 cm. Chester Dale papers, 1897-1971 (bulk 1950-1968). Archives of American Art. |
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Created on ... Oct. 2, 2001 |
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