The world knows Frida Kahlo as a revolutionary artist and the iconic partner of Diego Rivera, but a new museum expansion in Mexico City offers an intimate, untold perspective: Frida as daughter, sister, and friend. Museo Casa Kahlo is the result of transforming Casa Roja—the former family home of Kahlo’s sister, located near the famous Casa Azul—into a dedicated exhibition space operated by Fundación Kahlo. Designed by architect Mariana Doet Zepeda Orozco, with exhibit experience by Rockwell Group, the museum meticulously guides visitors through restored rooms and a recreated hidden studio filled with personal artifacts. The project is a study in architectural narrative, using period-appropriate restoration and innovative exhibition design to frame the most private moments of Kahlo’s life, transforming a red-painted family residence into a deeply evocative sanctuary of her creative and domestic spirit.
The Architectural Narrative: Casa Roja’s Transformation
The Museo Casa Kahlo project began with the transformation of a heritage building known as Casa Roja (Red House). This residence holds significant personal history, having been purchased by Kahlo’s parents and later bought by Frida herself for her sister and family, providing an accessible retreat close to her own, the iconic Casa Azul. The architecture’s primary goal was to preserve this familial and historical integrity while making the building suitable for a modern museum flow.
Architect Mariana Doet Zepeda Orozco oversaw the structural and spatial changes. Previously, the building’s street-facing entry was a simple driveway, which has now been thoughtfully converted into the museum’s main entrance and ticketing area. This entry hallway immediately immerses the visitor, featuring a ticketing desk fabricated by artisans in Guadalajara and walls lined with historical family photographs, setting the personal, biographical tone of the exhibition from the first step. The space moves beyond the familiar public persona to reveal the artist’s life away from the public eye.
Restoration and the Central Courtyard
A central focus of the architectural restoration was the home’s courtyard, a vital part of Mexican domestic architecture and a key setting for the family’s life. Based on meticulous research using old family photos, the restoration successfully recreated a lost piece of the home’s history: a curved corner stair that had been removed or destroyed over time was rebuilt, restoring the courtyard’s original proportions and traditional design elements.
The courtyard itself is celebrated as a source of inspiration and material culture. It features local, hand-sourced materials that reflect the environment and Kahlo’s own aesthetic. Ceramics sourced from various regions across Mexico are used as colorful planters. Most importantly, a hand-carved Cantera Stone pot holds a grapefruit tree—the very tree that Kahlo immortalized in a mural she painted in the home’s kitchen. This direct link between the physical structure, the plantings, and Kahlo’s artwork emphasizes the home’s role as both a domestic setting and a direct source of her artistic inspiration.
The Exhibition Flow: From Family Life to Hidden Retreat
The exhibition flow, designed by Rockwell Group with graphic and creative direction by Pentagram and Ileen Gallagher, is deliberately structured to peel back the layers of Kahlo’s life, moving from public spaces toward the intensely private. The restored rooms, which include the darkroom of her photographer father, Guillermo, lead visitors through a series of galleries filled with personal artifacts, handwritten letters, clothing, and photographs.
This curated collection aims to tell the “untold story of Frida’s day-to-day life,” repositioning her narrative beyond her relationship with Diego Rivera. Rockwell Group’s design uses these rooms and galleries to narrate Frida’s roles as a daughter, sister, aunt, and friend, relying on the emotional resonance of the personal belongings to paint a detailed picture of her relationships and early inspirations. This careful sequencing of galleries and family history culminates in the museum’s most evocative space.
The Hidden Studio: A Candlelit Focus
The emotional and creative focal point of Museo Casa Kahlo is the recreation of the artist’s “hidden retreat,” a studio space located in the basement that had never before been seen by the public. This space is presented as a sanctuary where Kahlo was entirely free from outside pressures, a place where she was able to “write, paint, think, and sketch in a safe and intimate environment.”
The recreation is intensely atmospheric, often described as candlelit, designed to make guests feel the raw spirit and creative energy of the artist. It is filled with the kind of personal ephemera that defined her idiosyncratic interior life, including various collections—such as her collection of dolls and her bug collection—as well as furniture, textiles, and her desk, paints, and paintings. To further enhance this sense of intimate access, The LAB at Rockwell Group produced an interactive replica of her microscope, allowing visitors to observe the same specimens Kahlo once studied, creating a tangible connection to her intellectual curiosity and artistic process.
Legacy and Cultural Impact
By focusing on the Casa Roja—the sister’s home rather than the internationally recognized Casa Azul—the museum achieves a crucial shift in perspective. It expands the public understanding of Kahlo’s life, grounding her monumental artistic legacy in her domestic reality and familial bonds. The meticulous design, led by Mariana Doet Zepeda Orozco and Rockwell Group, serves as a powerful reminder that the artist’s early inspirations and creative sanctuary were cultivated within the close, supportive confines of her family.
The exhibition’s blend of architecture, artifacts, and interactive elements highlights the rich, complex life of one of Mexico’s most celebrated artists. The choice of local materials like Cantera Stone, Mexican ceramics, and bespoke artisan fabrication emphasizes the deep connection between Kahlo’s work, her family history, and the vibrant material culture of Mexico. In its completed form, Museo Casa Kahlo stands as a successful model of how architectural preservation and innovative exhibition design can combine to offer a profound and personal exploration of a global cultural icon.




