Mexique
Frida Kahlo Museum

Four most iconic pieces in Frida Kahlo Museum, The Blue House

Rutopía editorial team
Rutopía editorial team
October 2, 2024
- min. de lecture

Design your trip to Mexico with a local travel designer. Unique activities and lodging, 100% tailor-made and stress-free.

Share
Ils mettent en valeur notre travail
United Nations | Brand logoEntrepreneur | Brand LogoForbes | Brand logo
Voyages uniques au Mexique. Fait sur mesure pour vous.
Demandez votre voyage
Let a local guide help you plan your trip to Mexico
Start tailor-made trip

The Blue House is the ideal place to appreciate the most intimate universe of Mexican painter Frida Kahlo.  There she was born, lived, worked, fell in love, forgave and even hated Diego Rivera. Today this typical Coyoacan mansion is also one of the most visited museums in Mexico City, along with the National Museum of Anthropology and the Tamayo Museum.

Every object inside the Casa Azul conveys the purest essence of Frida. Here you can breathe the bohemian atmosphere of the first years of Mexico’s 20th century; clay floors, traditional kitchen -with everything and clay dishes- paintings, pre-Columbian sculptures (that belonged to Rivera’s private collection), photographs, books and even the night and day bed where the artist spent a good part of the day.

Do you want to visit the Frida Kahlo Museum?

Request your tour here

To walk through this space with its blue façade is to walk through history. It seems that in every corner there is something to see, a small detail that allows us to penetrate into the tormented universe of the painter. Walking over her joys and turbulences will help us to understand our own life. In honor of this, we have selected four fundamental pieces exhibited in this space that are essential to understanding Frida Kahlo.

cocina_blue_house_rutopia

Would you like to learn more about this wonderful painter from an expert guide?

Request your trip here

Viva la Vida

We begin with one of Frida Kahlo’s most recognized works, the painting Viva la vida signed a few days before her death. It is a colorful and optimistic work, two characteristics that she herself always valued, although her physical pains sometimes did not allow her to do so.  Beyond watermelons, what we can see here is on the one hand a tribute to the roots of Mexico and on the other hand it is a strange way to say goodbye to life since commonly, on the Day of the Dead, watermelons are usually linked to skeletons.

viva_la_vida_frida_blue_house_rutopia

Learn all the secrets and experiences that the walls of The Blue House contain.

Request your trip

Frida’s toy collection

Another detail not to be missed is the toy showcase located in Frida’s room. It is a treasure in which you can contemplate the details of Frida’s childhood as well as her desire to have a child. A miniature world, made by Mexican artisans, which was part of her poetics. Behind the glass there is a tea set, sewing machines, lamps, quinqués, irons, casseroles, rag dolls, boxes, palm and clay figures, among many others.

vitrina_de_juguetes_frida_rutopia-1024x683

Know more about Frida Kahlo’s personality and ideas.

Request your trip

The Enchanted Garden in the Blue House

Surrounded by electric blue walls accompanied by the green color of the trees and plants living in it, the garden of Frida’s house is full of life. Here there is a large group of trees and flowers that decorate the landscape, a fountain made of different materials, stone walls and even what looks like a pyramid in the center.  There are also folk art decorations, shells and vases on the walls, pre-Hispanic sculptures, a stepped pyramid, a fountain, as well as a great variety of cactus and other Mexican plants that distinguish their work.

piramide_prehispanica_jardin_blue_house_rutopia

Learn the complete history of the Blue House Garden and be amazed of how it was built.

Request your trip here

Collection of Pre-Hispanic Pieces

It is important to highlight that Diego Rivera loved pre-Columbian art, a proof of this is the collection of pre-Hispanic pieces distributed throughout the gardens and the interior of the Casa Azul. There are beads hanging on the walls, plants and looms. And if you love pre-Hispanic art, you can see more at the Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo House-Studio Museum.

frida_blue_house_piezas_prehispanicas_rutopia

Want to know more about Diego Rivera and his famous works?

Request your trip

***

 Rutopía will design your perfect trip, in which you not only visit the Frida Kahlo museum also the beautiful surroundings of Coyoacán.

***

If you liked this post we recommend

Mexico, home of the monarch butterfly

Mexico has the largest, underwater archaeological site in the world

Some museums in Mexico that everyone should know

Abonnez-vous à notre newsletter

En cliquant sur Inscription, vous confirmez que vous acceptez nos Termes et Conditions.

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Articles Similaires

Voir tout
Rejoignez-nous dans cette aventure
Planifiez votre voyage avec nous
Brand logo: Orange version
Veuillez remplir les informations ci-dessous
1

* Veuillez noter qu'en fournissant votre adresse e-mail, vous consentez à être contacté rapidement par un membre de notre équipe.

Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.