Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera Arrive in Kansas City

What do Mexican art and the Nelson-Atkins museum in Missouri have in common?

ByABC News
April 22, 2013, 12:59 PM

June 17, 2013— -- Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, and several other Mexican artists have arrived to America's Heartland.

The Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, Missouri is currently showing Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, and Masterpieces of Modern Mexico from the Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection (quite the name). The museum's assistant curator Stephanie Knappe said it might be the exhibition with the longest title, but if it had to be summed up to one word it would be "passion".

So what is Mexican art doing in Kansas City, you ask? The show has an interesting backstory and its paintings are some of the best Kahlo works out there. Plus, the museum is reaching out to local kids and incorporating them into the exhibit. Let's take a look.

The Gelmans were the Steins of Mexico:

The art collecting couple Jacques and Natasha Gelman (pictured above) were like the Stein family of Mexico in that they befriended and collected art works from some of the most influential artists of their time (the 1940s and '50s). They had the works of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera all around their house. Imagine having a Frida original over your living room couch -- incredible.

Both Jacques and Natasha were Eastern Europeans who fled to Mexico from World War II. Jacques was a film producer from Russia and when he arrived in Mexico he started producing Cantinflas' films, and became pretty successful. He fell in love with the culture and the art and started collecting again, having had to leave his European art collection when he fled. He met and married Natasha in Mexico in 1941, and they became Mexican citizens by 1942.

Inside the Gelmans' home:

Why Kansas City?

The Nelson-Atkin Museum's director, Julián Zugazagotia says, "The reason why we're bringing the exhibition to the Midwest is because the region has never had an exhibit that showcases Mexican art and splendor in this way," said Zugazagotia, who is a Mexico City native himself. "There is a large community here of Hispanics who have never had a celebration of their culture. Bringing these artists here addresses that in a way," he says. Great.

Local Outreach

The museum reached out to local high schools and elementary schools to inspire and educate students on modern and historical Mexican artists. They brought copies of art pieces from the collection and asked the students to explain what they saw. Some of the responses they got were so great that curators decided to include excerpts from some of the students next to the pieces in the exhibit. Below you'll find some of those intuitive excerpts from local Kansas City students.

Now, the art (with commentary from curator and children):

Above is the first portrait the Gelmans commissioned from a Mexican artist, and it was painted by none other than Diego Rivera. Assitant curator Knappe says Natasha's pose reflects her husband's early film career -- that's why she's posing like a movie star. The calla lilies around her appear in many of Rivera's paintings and murals but they are usually associated with laborers and struggles. This was an interesting change for the artist's use of lilies.

"I think these girls are getting ready for a party or a wedding. In the background there is a mysterious man. Who is he? Is he spying on the girls or helping them?" -Fifth-grade student, Shawanoe Elementary.