41

Sister Mary Corita Kent

American, 1918-1986

Sister Mary Corita Kent
(American, 1918-1986)

"The Great Pumpkin", 1964

silkscreen in colors
pencil-signed and dated lower right, titled lower left, archive i.d. 64-32.
Matted, glazed and framed.
13-1/2" x 34-3/4", framed 19-3/4" x 40-3/4"

Provenance: Collection of Polly and Ed Renwick, New Orleans, Louisiana.

Literature: Joanne Moorehead, "Corita Kent, the Pop Art Nun, The Guardian, April 22, 2018.; https://www.corita.org/

Notes: I admire people who march. I admire people who go to jail. I don't have the guts to do that. So I do what I can.
Sister Mary Corita Kent

A popular graphic artist of the 60s and 70s associated with the pop art movement, Kent created colorful silkscreens that incorporated aspects of consumerism, religion and the popular culture of the world around her. A native of Iowa, she entered the order of the Immaculate Heart in Los Angeles at the age of 18, eventually becoming an instructor in the art department of the order's associated college for women. Under the encouragement of her order, she attended the University of Southern California, earning her masters in Art History.

With bright, bold images and often a few carefully chosen words, she explored such social issues as poverty, racism, and hunger. Kent hoped that by employing the fairly inexpensive medium of silkscreen, her artistic social commentaries would be accessible to the widest group of people. Inspired by the works of Andy Warhol, who was an ardent admirer of hers, Kent began to move away from the strictly figural into a more abstract style. This was all to prove unpopular with the more conservative members of the Catholic community; Cardinal James Frances McIntyre once referred to her art as "weird and sinister". After several years of pressure, Kent left the sisterhood in 1969.

silkscreen in colors
pencil-signed and dated lower right, titled lower left, archive i.d. 64-32.
Matted, glazed and framed.
13-1/2" x 34-3/4", framed 19-3/4" x 40-3/4"

  • Provenance: Collection of Polly and Ed Renwick, New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • Literature: Joanne Moorehead, "Corita Kent, the Pop Art Nun, The Guardian, April 22, 2018.; https://www.corita.org/
  • Notes: I admire people who march. I admire people who go to jail. I don't have the guts to do that. So I do what I can.
    Sister Mary Corita Kent

    A popular graphic artist of the 60s and 70s associated with the pop art movement, Kent created colorful silkscreens that incorporated aspects of consumerism, religion and the popular culture of the world around her. A native of Iowa, she entered the order of the Immaculate Heart in Los Angeles at the age of 18, eventually becoming an instructor in the art department of the order's associated college for women. Under the encouragement of her order, she attended the University of Southern California, earning her masters in Art History.

    With bright, bold images and often a few carefully chosen words, she explored such social issues as poverty, racism, and hunger. Kent hoped that by employing the fairly inexpensive medium of silkscreen, her artistic social commentaries would be accessible to the widest group of people. Inspired by the works of Andy Warhol, who was an ardent admirer of hers, Kent began to move away from the strictly figural into a more abstract style. This was all to prove unpopular with the more conservative members of the Catholic community; Cardinal James Frances McIntyre once referred to her art as "weird and sinister". After several years of pressure, Kent left the sisterhood in 1969.

  • Condition: **Not removed from the frame for condition report. No signs of past restorations. Toning of the paper. Good colors.
    Frame with surface marks, nicks and abrasions.

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