About a month before doctors amputated her right leg at the knee, Mexican artist Frida Kahlo drew a picture of her severed feet on a pedestal. Instead of healthy veins protruding from the amputated feet, dead, thorny vines snake out. The flesh is yellow, anemic, and the page is stained with her blood.
This is one of many diary entries in which Frida explores her anguish over the impending operation. She knew that she had no other choice but to cut off her leg. In truth, her right leg was skinny, crippled, shriveled, and lame. It hung from her body as if it were broken. Two toes were missing from the foot. The leg was infected with gangrene. It hurt her terribly.
Her husband Mexican muralist Diego Rivera urged her to accept her fate and submit to yet another operation. Maybe she would be able to get a good prosthetic leg, he urged, and walk a little.
For Diego’s sake, she said to the doctors,
“Prepare me for the operation!”
Then, putting on a brave face for her friends, she asked them,
“Did you know they are going to cut off my paw?”
For more on Frida Kahlo on this blog, click here.
Herrera, Hayden. Frida: A Biography of Frida Kahlo. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, Inc., 1983.
The Diary of Frida Kahlo: An Intimate Self-Portrait. Introduction by Carlos Fuentes. Essays by Sarah M. Lowe. New York: Abradale, 1995.
It must have taken courage to even draw about the operation. I always learn from your posts!
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I just wanted to let you know how much I enjoy your site. I haven’t checked it in a while and was happy to see such interesting new posts. Thank you for bringing history to life! It is always a delight.
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