Works by authors and creators who died in 1954 are publicly accessible—depending on your jurisdiction
The fashion writer Derek Guy—perhaps best known for his pithy menswear observations and advice, dolled out via X—talks us through his sartorial favourites, from David Hockney to Njideka Akunyili Crosby
The house will be a research centre instead, allegedly due to a labour struggle at the university that owns it
Madonna may have tried on Kahlo's clothes during a previous visit to her family home
The artist’s survey at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum tracks the formal language she developed to depict an essential process in life—one that, historically, has been rarely depicted
The company that owns the anti-capitalist artist's image is embroiled in yet another legal tussle over representation
New film about the Mexican artist quotes extensively from her unguarded, strident diaries and notebooks
On the edges of Buenos Aires, the Museum of Latin American Art has launched a second exhibition space. John Kampfner pays a visit.
The German city is hosting the first major European exhibition of her paintings, which are barely known outside her adopted country of Mexico
Collector Martin Mobarak purportedly set a 1944 Kahlo drawing on fire in a martini glass while a mariachi band burst into song during a ceremony at his Miami mansion
Developed with the permission and assistance of Kahlo’s estate, the musical will offer “a full-throated celebration of Kahlo’s joyous spirit of creativity”
Exhibition of the Mexican artist’s documents tell of often fraught dealings with doctors and the support she received from friends
The subjects of great works of art have not always led the romanticised life we imagine, as examples from a new book show
The show includes works by Kahlo, Rivera and others from the collection of the late philanthropists Jacques and Natasha Gelman
Hitting the block at Sotheby's next month, Diego y yo (Diego and I), painted in 1949, could become the most valuable Latin American work ever sold at auction
The years-long legal tussle over the rights to the Mexican painter’s image was dismissed by a US District Court this week
Legendary musician Tino Contreras says he looks forward to setting up his drum kit among pre-Colombian sculptures in the patio garden for live-streamed event
Search data from 84 countries last year shows that Leonardo, Van Gogh and Frida Kahlo were among the world's most popular artists
Delayed for a year because of the coronavirus pandemic, a show of the beloved Mexican artist’s work prepares to open in the Chicago suburbs with a full slate of virtual programming
We take a tour of the Artemisia Gentileschi show in London with curator Letizia Treves and explore a new biography of Frida Kahlo with its author, Hettie Judah
The Venezuelan artist— associated with the founders of European Surrealism and the New York School in the 1940s—centred her art on nature and her own life story, and became a sensation in her 99th year
Missing for six decades, La Mesa Herida (The Wounded Table) may be in a London warehouse, but experts say the work is likely a fake
Featuring works by Louise Bourgeois, Elizabeth Catlett and others, the online series explores artists' experiences of motherhood and their connection to their own moms
The US-Iranian artist tells The Art Newspaper which artists inspire her and why
Our pick of highlights from the next fortnight's auctions and fairs
From Lucio Fontana's punctured canvases to an intimate look at Frida Kahlo's personal objects
From Frida Kahlo's hidden treasures to a layered look at James Baldwin
Shows at the Brooklyn Museum and the Museum of Fine Arts Boston explore the Mexican artist’s love of fashion and “arte popular”
As the exhibition opens in Moscow, curators hope a photograph of the missing work might jog the memory of any witnesses