Frida, In Conclusion
New Mixed Media Works
by Joe McGee
Public opening reception August 23rd from 12-2 PM
On view August 22nd-September 7th, 2025
Capacity Contemporary Exchange
From the Artist
“I must stop now. This is it. No more my dearest Frida!”, I said to myself when I began this latest series using the image of Frida Kahlo. This is my 4th such series dedicated to her (I do other themes as well, also in serial form, usually lasting several months to as long as 2 years) in the past decade. I have been using/altering Kahlo’s famous image, both photos of her or reproductions of her artworks for some time now to make collages. I cut these images from old calendars or cards, or more often, I look on the web, then print anything of interest (almost always her intense photos taken of her looking at the viewer) on colored, patterned art papers on my cheap device at home. I like to create little stories of her life (she looks at me, I look at her) that I make up as I work on each collage. I have done so many now, easily 100, and this will be the 3rd exhibit dedicated to her. It is just too much to have so many Fridas looking at you, so I covered over, made new paintings of most of the previous Frida works (I tend to do this anyway), some were good ones. But, I keep coming back to her. For it is easy, the works just flow out (and that is not a simple thing to find as a visual artist). But Frida, “No mas querido!”
“How did it start? What is your fascination with Frida Kahlo?”, I am often asked. It is hard for me to explain, besides the fact she died in 1954, the year I was born. But it is much more than that simple connection, and it did not happen overnight.
I first became aware of Frida Kahlo when I purchased a book on her art in the late 1970s as I began art school. The teacher of my first painting class had instructed his students to go to a book store and purchase a couple of books of artists we liked, and bring them back to class so we could all discuss the artists we had chosen as a group. I bought two books, one on Rene Magritte, the second on Frida Kahlo. In my mind, both Magritte and Kahlo appeared to be Surrealists, to which I had some notion that my own early work was related. I was also aware of her appeal to the 1960s-70s counterculture movement I was drawn to at the time. Like many, I thought Frida’s art, her life, and indeed her very image were very cool!
So I kept up with Frida, reading any books or articles I came upon, and always looking, smiling to myself as if seeing an old friend whenever I saw her intense gaze with her famous unibrow. She seemed to be everywhere in Popular Culture! I was a big fan, but that was it. I had not yet joined her cult. That would occur many years later and I can pinpoint the exact moment my general interest in Frida turned into an intense fascination that I cannot seem to shake.
In the Fall of 2012, I saw in the news that the Bellarmine University Theater Department was putting on a production titled, “Frida Kahlo: A Portrait”, by Carlos-Manuel. My interest piqued; I went to a performance to check the production out. The Bellarmine Theater is quite small, I was sitting in the second row, and just a few feet from the stage. The lead actor, Victoria Reibel, was quite good in the role of Frida. I was enjoying the performance, and then it happened. As the 2nd act began, the lights came on, and there, sitting in a chair on the stage, was Frida--portrayed by Reibel, crying in extreme agony, just wailing in grief. Frida’s long hair, now shorn, lay on the floor mere feet from where I sat. At that particular moment of the play, the actor was depicting Frida just as she has found out that her husband, artist Diego Rivera, has cheated on her with her very own sister. The moment was unbearable for me to watch. I closed my eyes and I could no longer look. My first instinct was to leave the theater, to run away, but could not easily do so without causing a disruption. Then, the wailing stopped. As I reopened my eyes, it was now Frida Kahlo herself in front of me, not the actor portraying her. I was with her!
The very next day I began this series on Frida Kahlo, from the start working in collage. And now, it is 2025! “No more! It must end my longtime friend. I will never forget you Frida!”
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About the Artist
Artist Joe McGee was born in Louisville, KY, in 1954 where he lives and works. McGee graduated with honors from the Hite Art Institute, University of Louisville, in 1986, with a BFA in Sculpture. He received an SAF/NEA Regional Fellowship in Drawing in 1998. In the 35 plus years since graduating from art school, McGee has maintained a constant biennial solo exhibit schedule of both his 2D and 3D art in private galleries as well as regional university galleries, and has participated in many group exhibitions as well over the decades. His artwork can be found in many private and public collections in the region. Working in his studio behind his home, McGee’s themes for his exhibits tend to be serial in nature, completed over two year periods.

































