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Sister Mary Corita Kent

He Repeated the Letters of the Alphabet
He Repeated the Letters of the Alphabet
He Repeated the Letters of the Alphabet

He Repeated the Letters of the Alphabet

 (American, 1918-1986)
Color Screenprint
22 1/2 x 38 3/4 in. (57.1 x 98.4 cm)
Corita Kent (1918–1986) was an artist, educator, and advocate for social justice. At age 18 she entered the religious order Immaculate Heart of Mary, eventually teaching and then heading the art department at Immaculate Heart College. During the course of her career, her artwork evolved from using figurative and religious imagery to incorporating advertising images and slogans, popular song lyrics, biblical verses, and literature. Throughout the ‘60s, her work became increasingly political, urging viewers to consider poverty, racism, and social injustice. In 1968, she left the order and moved to Boston. After 1970, her work evolved into a sparser, introspective style, influenced by living in a new environment, a secular life, and her battles with cancer. She remained active in social causes until her death in 1986. At the time of her death, she had created almost 800 serigraph editions, thousands of watercolors, and innumerable public and private commissions.
Leo Baeck and a Spirit is Characterized
Sister Mary Corita Kent
Color Lithograph
Thoreau "If A Man Does Not Keep Peace"
Sister Mary Corita Kent
Color Lithograph
Shanties on the Harbor
Louise McMahon Horwitz
Watercolor
Boston Massacre
Larry Rivers
1970
Screenprint in Colors with Embossing and Collage
Ballad of the Skeletons
Allen Ginsberg
1996
Screenprint in Colors on Wove Paper
Hudson River Valley with Waterfall
John William Hill
Watercolor and Gouache
West Point Maine
John Marin
1915
Watercolor on Paper
Reading Lesson
Bernard Pothast
Oil on Panel
Pickaxe (Spitzhacke) Superimposed on a Drawing of the Site by E.L. Grimm
Claes Oldenburg
1982
Color Photogravure, Etching, and Spitbite Aquatint on Paper
Gold Iridescence
Durand Art Glass
c. 1920s
Glass