Frida Kahlo, an exhibition at Scuderie del Quirinale in Rome, Italy from March 20 to August 31, 2014, curated by Helga Prignitz and featuring 160 works including paintings, drawings, and designs from collections in Mexico, Europe, and the United States, established an international record in its number of visitors. A week before closing, the Rome exhibition had received more than 300,000 visits in five months, which represents an average of 2,000 daily visits. Piergiorgio Paris, in charge of press relations for Palaexpo, says that "the Frida Kahlo exhibition sets an international record, beyond all expectations." The success of the exhibition a few days before its closing resulted in the programming of extended hours for its last week, from 10:00 am through 11:00 pm. The exhibition also featured works of art by avant-garde artists contemporaneous with Kahlo, such as Giorgio de Chirico and Roland Penrose. Chosen to represent the show and for use in its advertisements was Autorretrato con Collar de Espinas y Colibrí, a Kahlo painting now in the Nickolas Murray collection at the University of Texas. Among Frida Kahlo's works also featured in the exhibition were her famous Autorretrato con Traje de Terciopelo, from 1926; Autorretrato en la Frontera entre México y los Estados Unidos, from 1932; Autorretrato con Monos, from 1943; and Autorretrato como Tehuana, Diego en mi pensamiento and Pensando en Diego, all from 1943. The exhibition will have a second phase in Italy, starting on September 20 at the Palazzo Ducale in Genoa, as part of a show that will also feature works by Diego Rivera and will remain open through February 15, 2015.