Toy-maker Mattel was in a dispute with a distant relative of the late Mexican artist Frida Kahlo on Thursday.
The tiff was over rights to a Frida Barbie doll released as part of the company’s Inspiring Women series.
Kahlo’s great-niece Mara de Anda Romeo said Mattel doesn’t have the rights to use Kahlo’s image.
Pablo Sangri, a lawyer for de Anda Romeo, said his client doesn’t seek money, but wants Mattel to talk about redesigning the doll.
This product image released by Barbie shows dolls of pilot Amelia Earhart, left, Mexican artist Frida Kahlo and mathematician Katherine Johnson, part of the Inspiring Women line series launched ahead of International Women’s Day
This undated handout photo issued by The Victoria & Albert Museum (V&A) shows Frida Kahlo in a blue satin blouse
A demonstrator holds up a placard depicting a portrait of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo and reading ‘Woman, arm-love yourself, start the revolution’ during a demonstration to defend women’s rights on International Women’s Day in Barcelona, on March 8, 2018
‘We will talk to them about regularizing this situation, and by regularizing I mean talking about the appearance of the doll, its characteristics, the history the doll should have to match what the artist really was,’ Sangri said.
Critics complain the doll doesn’t reflect Kahlo’s heavy, nearly conjoined eyebrows, and they say its costume doesn’t accurately portray the elaborate Tehuana-style dresses the artist wore.
That is, it’s more Barbie-like than Frida-like. Barbie is an American icon that has often been criticized as promoting an unrealistic body image and consumerist lifestyle.
Mara De Anda Romeo and Mara Romeo Kahlo during Frida Kahlo Tequila Launch on November 15, 2005 at Michael Scott Estate in Los Angeles, California
Kahlo was a life-long communist who died in 1954 before the doll was introduced.
Mattel said in a statement that it worked with the Panama-based Frida Kahlo Corp., ‘which owns all the rights.’
‘The Frida Kahlo Corporation actively participated in the process of designing the doll, Mattel has its permission and a legal contract that grants it the rights to make a doll of the great Frida Kahlo,’ the company’s statement said.
The corporation said it got the rights through Kahlo’s niece, Isolda Pinedo Kahlo, more than a decade ago.
The corporation said in a statement that it ‘celebrates the ideological contributions of Frida Kahlo which have transcended the borders of art and which will influence new generations as a world icon through the Frida Kahlo Barbie, which conserves the essence of Barbie and the legacy of Frida Kahlo.’