Wednesday, 26 November 2025

#02. Frida's Carved Canopy

A white canvas. A flash of colours. A piece of art.

One day in my class, a student showcased her painting. She posed a question to the audience—what do you see? Interpretations filled the room, each voice adding its own colour. When my turn came, I offered something different. This isn't about claiming my reading was superior; rather, it's about how deeply I understood her vision. That painting explored the delicate boundary between the world within the self and the world beyond it.

Earlier this week, I stumbled upon captivating news—El SueƱo by Frida Kahlo sold for $54.7 million, making it the most valuable work by a woman artist ever auctioned. When critics labelled it a reflection of her dreams, she famously countered, "I never painted dreams; I painted my own reality." Amid a long-term terminal illness, her body weakened by polio since childhood and her spirit tested by a turbulent marriage, Frida was confined to her bed. Yet while her body remained bound, her mind soared free, and her creativity knew no limits.

Being an artist is like wielding magic, and I believe we are all artists in our own right. Don't we constantly imagine ourselves being this or that, saying one thing or another? Whether navigating pain or pleasure, laughter or tears, remorse or defiance, we all yearn for the freedom to express our truth. In an earlier interview, Frida described her art as a bridge between worlds—a space where she could explore her morality. Not a morality subjected to others' judgment, but one aligned with her gut, her conscience, her unapologetic self. Perhaps that's the real magic: the courage to carve our own canopy in a world that often demands we conform.

Frida painted her reality. What will you and I paint in ours?

(Pic.) Frida's Carved Canopy :)

7 comments:

  1. This was such a beautifully written reflection... ma'am , It truly made me think about how each of us shapes our own reality

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  2. Isn't it nice when Frida told she painted her reality and not her dreams
    How many of us are ready to break our casts?
    We view ourselves within ourselves or within someone else even through music, colours and lot more
    Is that survival or living?
    Surviving by quenching the thirst just by looking at someone living some of our dreams
    Frida lived herself by letting her reality live out of the cast, isn't she?

    Learnt from your previous content mam
    To all your upcoming contents✨.......

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    1. It indeed requires a lot of courage to not only break our chains but also to express ourselves, our lived experiences, our reality so vividly and through artistic beauty :)

      Isn't it the point of living rather than simply surviving?

      Thank you for the thought dear!

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  3. "Yath bhaavam Thath Bhavathi" --> What you think is what you become.
    It captures the moment where we run-through in our minds what we are about to encounter (or) experience. The painting of Frida gives us the idea that 'it is not the external forces that decide who we are (or) who we want to be....it is US who limit ourselves..'
    The physical body may have limitations, but the inner being (Atma) is limitless, boundaryless... It knows about our past avatars, lives in the present, and awaits the future.... Once we understand our self, we can do wonders in this prakriti.....

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    Replies
    1. Of course Shriram! Her entire life is a testimony to how even in the most constrained of circumstances, there is so much room for self expression through art. Art that liberates! :)

      Thank you for the thought! A very interesting one at that.

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