Frida Kahlo's studio and garden to spring up in New York

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Frida KahloImage source, AP
Image caption,
Frida Kahlo's 1940 painting entitled Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird will be on display

Mexican artist Frida Kahlo's garden and studio will be recreated at the New York Botanical Garden next year.

Frida Kahlo: Art, Garden, Life will be the late artist's first solo show in New York for more than 25 years.

The exhibition will include original paintings by Kahlo which reflect the use of botanical imagery in her work.

Kahlo, who died 60 years ago, remains best known for her searing self-portraits and her use of intense, vibrant colours.

The exhibition follows a similar project at the New York Botanical Garden in 2012 which re-imagined Claude Monet's flower and water gardens at Giverny.

Image source, Rex Features
Image caption,
Frida Kahlo lived her whole life in the Casa Azul in Mexico

The Kahlo show, which opens on 16 May 2015 and runs to November, will see the Botanical Garden's Enid A Haupt Conservatory transformed into Kahlo's family home Casa Azul (The Blue House).

It will recreate the blue courtyard walls, a scale version of a pyramid created to display pre-Columbian art collected by her husband, muralist Diego Rivera, and Kahlo's studio. There will also be a lava rock path lined with native flowers from Mexico.

Kahlo lived her entire life, from 1907 to 1954, in the cobalt-blue house in Coyoacan, outside Mexico City.

Image source, Rex Features
Image caption,
Frida Kahlo often used plants and other natural materials in her self-portraits

She began to paint in 1925 while recovering from a bus accident that left her in constant pain and permanently disabled, leading to more than 30 operations.

Kahlo's inclusion of plants and nature in her work spans her entire career, but was most intensive during the 1940s and '50s when her health declined and she was increasingly confined to her home.

The exhibition, curated by Mexican art specialist Adriana Zavala, "will celebrate the energy and sophistication of Mexican culture" and provide and "in-depth look at Kahlo's work", said Gregory Long of the Botanical Gardens.

In recent years Kahlo's art has been increasingly sought by leading museums. Her face is featured on Mexico's 500-peso note and she was the subject of an Oscar-winning biopic in 2002.

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