Frida Kahlo painting known only from an old photo resurfaces
It was never publicly displayed, and Kahlo hung on to it until her death in 1954. "The painting would hold a particular meaning to her," according to Sotheby`s, which is auctioning Niña Con Collar on Nov. 22.
"It proved to be a spring well of ideas for works to come." After Kahlo`s death, her husband gave the painting to a woman who helped the artist in her studio.
For decades, Niña Con Collar was known only from a black-and-white photo, Artnet reports. Then last summer, the woman, now in her 90s, decided to give the painting to Sotheby`s to auction off.
The auction house`s Axel Stein calls it a "beautiful and warm painting." "The painting looks very fresh," Reuters quotes Stein as saying. "It was in a dark part of the house so the colors are vibrant." Past Kahlo works have gone for more than $15 million at auction, though Niña Con Collar is expected to fetch a fraction of that.
Kahlo paintings are very rare, partly because it`s illegal to export them from Mexico. (A long-lost Victorian painting turned up on Antiques Roadshow.)






