Self-Portrait Dedicated to Leon Trotsky

Self-Portrait Dedicated to Leon Trotsky
Spanish: Autorretrato dedicado a León Trotsky
A self-portrait of Frida Kahlo dedicated to Leon Trotsky
ArtistFrida Kahlo
Year1937
MediumOil on masonite[1]
Movement
Dimensions76.2 cm × 60.96 cm (30.0 in × 24.00 in)
LocationNational Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C.

Self-Portrait Dedicated to Leon Trotsky, also known as Between the Curtains, is a 1937 painting by Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, given to Leon Trotsky on his birthday and the 20th anniversary of the October Revolution. Kahlo and her husband, artist Diego Rivera, had convinced government officials to allow Trotsky and his second wife, Natalia Sedova, to live in exile in Mexico. The Russian couple moved into the Blue House (La Casa Azul), where they resided for two years.

Soon after the couples met, Kahlo and Trotsky began showing affection towards each other. A brief affair occurred, but ended by July 1937. A few months later, she presented Trotsky with a self-portrait dedicated to him, which he hung in his study. When Trotsky was assassinated in 1940, Kahlo was heartbroken and planned to destroy the painting. A friend who was visiting at the time, Clare Boothe Luce, convinced her not to do so and acquired the painting herself.

In 1988, Luce donated the painting to Wilhelmina Holladay, co-founder of the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. Since that time, it has become one of the museum's most popular works. It is also the only Kahlo painting in a Washington, D.C., museum's permanent collection.

  1. ^ "Self-Portrait Dedicated to Leon Trotsky". Google Arts & Culture. Archived from the original on November 11, 2023. Retrieved November 13, 2023.