The company has demanded all associated profits or $2 million for each trademark infringement.
The Frida Kahlo Corporation (FKC) is a taking a renewed stand against the unauthorized commodification of the artist’s image. On Monday, March 4, the company filed two lawsuits at an Illinois district court claiming that a group of online sellers have counterfeited its trademarks to sell Frida Kahlo products.

In damages, the FKC has demanded all associated profits or $2 million for each trademark infringement.

The company claims in its lawsuit that a network of online merchants operated under “fictitious names” to sell items on Amazon and other platforms, sourcing product from a “common source” while working together to evade legal scrutiny. Their apparently independent stores share “unique identifiers,” the FKC claimed, suggesting that the sellers are “an interrelated group of counterfeiters working in active concert.”

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