Corita Kent used her bold silkscreens to advocate for social change during the 1960s. A new center in downtown L.A. honors ...
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Los Angeles Magazine on MSNA New L.A. Art Center Honors a Nun Turned Artist in 1960s HollywoodMy heart throbs for her studio,” says Nellie Scott, executive director of the Corita Art Center, which is opening a new ...
Even if you don’t know the name Corita Kent, you probably know her work. Kent created the iconic “Rainbow Swash” on the gas tank visible from I-93 in Dorchester. Its soaring strokes of pure ...
The story of Corita Kent, also called Sister Mary Corita (1918-86), is one of them. A teacher and artist, Kent used art to promote messages of peace, hope and social justice in the 1960s and 70s.
LOS ANGELES — Radical “Pop-Art Nun” Corita Kent is moving downtown. This Saturday, March 8, the Corita Art Center (CAC) will open the doors of its new home in LA’s Arts District ...
The Corita Kent Art Center combines the artist’s foundation, an archive and gallery, and educational and community spaces to continue her extension of art into life. The Catalina Museum for Art & ...
Corita Kent, also known as Sister Mary Corita, spent a lifetime creating art infused with social justice, religious meaning and a craving for peace. Eleven years after her death in 1986 ...
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