Open navigationClose navigation

Home

Shows

This Day in History

U.S. History

All the major chapters in the American story, from Indigenous beginnings to the present day.

  • Colonial America

    Colonial America

  • American Revolution

    American Revolution

  • Early U.S.

    Early U.S.

  • Slavery

    Slavery

  • Civil War

    Civil War

  • Immigration

    Immigration

  • Great Depression

    Great Depression

  • Black History

    Black History

  • Hispanic History

    Hispanic History

  • Women’s History

    Women’s History

  • LGBTQ+ History

    LGBTQ+ History

  • Native American History

    Native American History

  • Asian American, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander History

    Asian American, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander History

  • U.S. Presidents

    U.S. Presidents

  • First Ladies

    First Ladies

  • U.S. Constitution

    U.S. Constitution

  • U.S. Government and Politics

    U.S. Government and Politics

  • U.S. States

    U.S. States

  • Crime

    Crime

World History

History from countries and communities across the globe, including the world’s major wars.

  • African History

    African History

  • Asian History

    Asian History

  • Cold War

    Cold War

  • European History

    European History

  • Exploration

    Exploration

  • Holocaust

    Holocaust

  • Industrial Revolution

    Industrial Revolution

  • Latin American & Caribbean History

    Latin American & Caribbean History

  • Middle Eastern History

    Middle Eastern History

  • World War I

    World War I

  • World War II

    World War II

  • Vietnam War

    Vietnam War

Eras & Ages

From prehistory, though antiquity and into the 21st century, all of history’s biggest chapters.

  • Prehistory

    Prehistory

  • Ancient Greece

    Ancient Greece

  • Ancient Egypt

    Ancient Egypt

  • Ancient China

    Ancient China

  • Ancient Middle East

    Ancient Middle East

  • Ancient Americas

    Ancient Americas

  • Ancient Rome

    Ancient Rome

  • Middle Ages

    Middle Ages

  • Renaissance

    Renaissance

  • 19th Century

    19th Century

  • 20th Century

    20th Century

  • 21st Century

    21st Century

Culture & Tradition

The stories behind the faiths, food, entertainment and holidays that shape our world.

  • Arts & Entertainment

    Arts & Entertainment

  • Food

    Food

  • Holidays

    Holidays

  • Landmarks

    Landmarks

  • Mysteries & Folklore

    Mysteries & Folklore

  • Religion

    Religion

  • Sports

    Sports

Science & Innovation

The pivotal discoveries, visionary inventors and natural phenomena that impacted history.

  • Inventions & Science

    Inventions & Science

  • Natural Disasters & Environment

    Natural Disasters & Environment

  • Space Exploration

    Space Exploration

  • Archaeology

    Archaeology

HISTORY Honors 250

Stream HISTORY
Stream HISTORY

By: Elizabeth Svoboda

Annual Observances

How a Devastating Accident Changed Frida Kahlo’s Life and Inspired Her Art

After a trolley car collided with a bus carrying the 18-year-old Mexican artist, pain and resilience emerged as perennial themes in her work.

Elizabeth Svoboda

Elizabeth Svoboda

How a Horrible Accident Transformed Frida Kahlo's Outlook and Art

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Published: March 01, 2022

Last Updated: March 02, 2025

When Frida Kahlo was 18 years old, she seemed on the verge of claiming the life she’d imagined. The daughter of a German artist father and a Mexican mother, Kahlo had wanted to be a doctor since she was a child. She was pursuing that dream through her studies at the National Preparatory School in Mexico City, about an hour’s drive from her hometown of Coyoacan. Though she was clearly a talented artist, art remained at the periphery of her life.

On September 17, 1925, that all changed. After a day of classes, Kahlo and her friend Alejandro Gomez Arias boarded a bus heading toward Coyoacan. Minutes after they sat down on a wooden bench, the bus turned a corner and slammed into an electric trolley car traveling at full speed. “The streetcar crushed the bus against the street corner,” Kahlo told author Raquel Tibol in Frida Kahlo: An Open Life. “It was a strange crash, not violent but dull and slow, and it injured everyone, me much more seriously.”

After the crash, Kahlo felt the bottom had dropped out of everything she’d known. But as her body healed—a process that took many months—her views of life and art radically transformed. While confined to bed, seeing very few visitors, she began painting more and more. “The loneliness led her to start expressing in a way that she wasn't doing before,” says performer Vanessa Severo, creator of the play Frida… A Self Portrait. “She was telling her story by painting it.”

Struggle for Mexican Independence

8 U.S. states exist on land that used to belong to Mexico. Learn more about Mexico's history!

As Kahlo’s career progressed, themes of pain and recovery emerged at the heart of her work. “She pushed through the pain and didn’t hide it,” Severo says. “She expressed it.”

That uncompromising honesty became one of her signature artistic qualities.

Crash Stranded Kahlo on a ‘Painful Planet’

Frida Kahlo laying in bed at her home in Mexico City, Mexico, 1952. A mirror affixed to the bed posts, below the canopy, allowed her to paint self-portraits while in the bed.

Gisele Freund/Photo Researchers History/Getty Images

Frida Kahlo laying in bed at her home in Mexico City, Mexico, 1952. A mirror affixed to the bed posts, below the canopy, allowed her to paint self-portraits while in the bed.

Gisele Freund/Photo Researchers History/Getty Images

When the bus Kahlo was riding hit a trolley car, she suffered serious internal injuries as a long metal rod tore through her midsection. On the scene of the accident, an onlooker tried to remove the metal rod from Kahlo’s body. “When he pulled it,” Arias recalled, “Frida screamed so loud that no one heard the siren of the Red Cross ambulance.”

Kahlo’s injuries were so severe that she had to be encased in a full-body plaster cast. The carefree years of her childhood, when she’d relished exploring the mysteries of life, came to an abrupt end. “After the accident, everything changed,” says art historian Celia Stahr, the author of Frida in America__. “She describes it as like lightning.” In a letter, Kahlo wrote Arias that she now lived on “a painful planet, transparent as ice.”

What sustained Kahlo through interminable days in bed was her painting. Her parents gave her a lap easel so she could paint while convalescing, and they mounted a mirror in her bed’s canopy to help her paint her own face.

As Kahlo slowly recovered, she started to venture outside again, but “it's not the life that she knew before,” Stahr says. Having been so immersed in the joys of artistic creation, Kahlo set aside her dream of becoming a doctor and dedicated herself to art.

Kahlo’s Self-Portrait in A Velvet Dress (1926), which she painted during her recovery, reveals the major changes she was going through. The turbulent seascape in the background signified her life’s upheaval, and for the first time, she portrayed herself on canvas with a prominent unibrow. “What we see happening is she’s going through this whole rebirth process,” Stahr says. “She said later in life that she was the one who gave birth to herself.”

Kahlo's Commitment to Radical Honesty About Pain

Artist Frida Kahlo beside her painting entitled, The Two Fridas, 1939.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Artist Frida Kahlo beside her painting entitled, The Two Fridas, 1939.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

As Kahlo gained confidence and self-assurance as a painter, she began alluding to a range of traumas she’d endured. In The Bus (1929), a young woman who resembles Kahlo sits on the wooden seat of a public bus—a scene that conjures up the last moments before Kahlo’s fateful accident.

Later on, Kahlo portrayed her physical and psychological pain in starker terms. In Henry Ford Hospital (1932), Kahlo depicts herself in a hospital bed bleeding after a miscarriage, tears sliding down her face. And in The Two Fridas (1939)—painted after Kahlo divorced muralist Diego Rivera—a version of Kahlo with her heart ripped open sits holding hands with another, healed version of herself.

“I suffered two serious accidents in my life, one in which a streetcar knocked me down,” Kahlo famously said. “The other accident was Diego.”

Kahlo’s depiction of her suffering was groundbreaking in its directness. In the early 20th century, “you didn’t have woman artists putting their own personal traumas in their art,” Stahr says. “It’s very personal, but it's also political, because of how women are viewed, how they're marginalized.”

That honesty, radical for its time, is what so many people connect with in Kahlo’s work decades later. “Instead of hiding what is painful and hard, she openly did share it,” says Severo, herself an artist living with disability. “She taught me that I can just stand up and be exactly who I am.”

Women's History Documentaries: Explore the stories of prominent women through history.

7-DAY FREE TRIAL

Commercial-free,

Cancel anytime

Stream Now

Exclusions & terms apply

Related Articles

Number 18 of the Arthur Murray Girls, a professional women's baseball team, in action, at a game in 1953. The team was formed on Long Island six years earlier.
Annual Observances

How World War II Spurred a Decade of Women’s Pro Baseball

The league was supposed to be temporary, but went on for 12 seasons.

Annual Observances

The Complicated Pasts of 6 Trailblazing Women

'Well-behaved women seldom make history.'

How World War I Helped Women Shed the Corset
Women’s History

How World War I Helped Women Ditch the Corset

A combination of cultural shifts and metal rationing spelled the demise of the stiff undergarment.

Women’s History

How Suffragists Raced to Secure Women’s Right to Vote Ahead of the 1920 Election

The 19th Amendment was ratified just in time to include women voters in the presidential election.

See All Articles

About the author

Elizabeth Svoboda
Elizabeth Svoboda

Elizabeth Svoboda is a writer based in San Jose, California and the author of What Makes a Hero?: The Surprising Science of Selflessness.

Fact Check

We strive for accuracy and fairness. But if you see something that doesn't look right, click here to contact us! HISTORY reviews and updates its content regularly to ensure it is complete and accurate.

Citation Information

Article title
How a Devastating Accident Changed Frida Kahlo’s Life and Inspired Her Art
Author
Elizabeth Svoboda
Website Name
History
URL
https://www.history.com/articles/frida-kahlo-bus-accident-art
Date Accessed
May 08, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
March 02, 2025
Original Published Date
March 01, 2022

History Revealed

Sign up for "Inside History"

Get fascinating history stories twice a week that connect the past with today’s world, plus an in-depth exploration every Friday.

By submitting your information, you agree to receive emails from HISTORY and A+E Global Media. You can opt out at any time. You must be 16 years or older and a resident of the United States.

More details: Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Us

King Tut's gold mask
A+E Global Media
History

HISTORY Education

HISTORY Vault™

HISTORY Apps

HISTORY2™

HISTORY en Español®

Military HISTORY®

Newsletter Sign Up

Share Your Opinions

FAQ / Contact Us

Advertise with Us

A+E Factual Studios™

A+E Studios®

Employment Opportunities

Accessibility Support

TV Parental Guidelines

A&ELifetimeLMNFYIVICE TV
BiographyCrime+InvestigationLRW

Advertise with Us

A+E Factual Studios™

A+E Studios®

Employment Opportunities

Accessibility Support

TV Parental Guidelines

© 2025, A&E Television Networks, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Terms of Use

Privacy Policy

Copyright Policy

Cookie Notice

Ad Choices

We’ve updated our
Terms of Use

We encourage you to review our updated Terms of Use. By clicking Continue, you agree to our updated Terms of Use.