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A nun is seen adjusting prints with bright color texts against a wall

Hola, Los Angeles!

I’m culture writer Carolina A. Miranda, recovering from the flu by eating all the pho and trash-talking Adrien Brody’s irritating acceptance speech at the Oscars. Besides that, this week’s prescription includes:

  • The reopening of the Corita Art Center in the Arts District, showing the work of the famed Pop Art nun
  • An inspiring doc about the socially liberally order that Corita was a part of
  • An important photographic acquisition at the Huntington
  • And an analysis of all the weird art on Severance

Keep scrolling! 

The featured photo at the top of this week's newsletter shows Corita Kent adjusting her 1965 serigraph "hope," and comes courtesy of the Corita Art Center.

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Art's Rebel Nun

The story of Corita Kent, the LA-based Pop Art nun who achieved international renown for her bold prints, is by now the stuff of subversive legend. A member of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, where she was known under the moniker Sister Mary Corita, Kent deployed the visual and verbal trappings of advertising to spiritual ends — and became famous for it, even landing on the cover of Newsweek in 1967. As a teacher at Immaculate Heart College, she influenced countless LA artists; her admirers included figures as diverse as director Alfred Hitchcock and composer John Cage. In the late 1960s, she left the Catholic order and pursued a successful career as an artist. Though she died in 1986, her cultural legacy remains so pronounced that often she is identified simply as “Corita.”  

A black and white photo shows Corita Kent standing before a billboard that reads "We Can Create Life Without War"

Corita sometime around 1984 with her billboard, "We Can Create Life Without War." (Corita Art Center)

A critical moment in Corita’s life is about to get a fresh look at the Corita Art Center (CAC), which is also marking the public debut of its new home in LA’s Arts District on March 8th

For CAC, the new digs have been a long time coming. Since its establishment in the late 1990s, the center had been based at the site of the old Immaculate Heart College in Los Feliz. (The college ceased operations in 1981 and the complex now harbors a high school.) But it was a complicated location — tiny and difficult to access.

In 2022, CAC relocated to a 2,300-square-foot space in the Arts District. Now, it is finally ready to open its doors. “It’s been a journey to get here,” said executive director Nellie Scott as she led me through their new offices late last month, “so it feels really good to say, ‘Hey, we’re here. Come by.’”

A view of an art gallery features bright printed posters and wall text that reads "heroes and sheroes" 

A view of the Corita Art Center's new gallery in LA's Arts District. (Marc Walker / Corita Art Center)

The new space (which is modest in scale) will feature a small permanent display about Corita’s life (including that famous Newsweek cover), along with regular rotating exhibitions. And they’re kicking those off with a bang — or a cultural flashpoint, to be precise. It centers on a suite of prints titled “heroes and sheroes” that was produced by Corita starting in 1968 — a series that marked a turning point in her life, not to mention US history.

That year, both Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy were assassinated and the Catonsville Nine in Maryland made headlines when they protested the Vietnam War by burning draft cards with napalm. In LA, Corita was facing struggles of her own — namely, with the arch-conservative James Francis Cardinal McIntyre, who had banned the nuns in her order from teaching because of their liberal tendencies. (The previous fall, the sisters at Immaculate Heart had given up the habit in favor of secular clothing.) 

Corita didn’t run the college, but she was one of its most visible exponents. She led its dynamic art department and was a well-known artist who maintained a packed schedule of exhibitions and lectures. This made her a target of the archdiocese — and that took a toll. So, in the summer of ‘68, she went on sabbatical, staying at the Cape Cod home of her friend and art dealer Celia Hubbard. As she frequently did during her summer breaks, Corita spent her time making art, beginning work on a number of prints, including the serigraphs she titled “heroes and sheroes.” When the sabbatical was over, she chose not to return to the order.

01.-Corita-Kent,-chavez,-1969_69-80__PH

"chavez," from the "heroes and sheroes" series. (Corita Art Center)

“heroes and sheroes” captures an important moment for Corita. In these pieces, she expands her range, appropriating magazine covers, headlines, and other news imagery to pay tribute to activist figures such as labor leader Cesar Chavez, the recently assassinated King, and the Catonsville Nine, which included the Catholic priests Father Philip Berrigan and Father Daniel Berrigan (who were siblings). Father Daniel, in particular, was an important mentor and friend. He wrote the introduction to Corita’s 1967 book, Footnotes and Headlines: A Play-Pray Book, which featured her reflections on faith and social justice. And she designed the covers for several of his books, including The Trial of the Catonsville Nine, published in 1970.

Olivian Cha, senior curator at CAC, describes “heroes and sheroes” as Corita’s “most pointed and political body of work.” And its reflections — on peace, justice, and activism — land at a critical moment in contemporary US politics.

corita-art-center-014-FOR-WEB

The new show also includes objects connected to Corita's practice. (Marc Walker / Corita Art Center)

“For artists, it raises the question, do you obey before you are asked?” says Scott. “I keep coming back to courage and what it means to take a stand.”

The show marks the first time all 29 prints will be seen together in LA — and a key moment for the center that bears Corita’s name, which almost four decades after her death, is still keeping her ideas alive.

🎨🎨🎨

heroes and sheroes opens on March 8th and will remain on view through March 2026 at the Corita Art Center; visits are by appointment and can be arranged through the website at corita.org.

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Corita 101

Need to know more about Corita? We’ve got your study guide!

Corita is known for her prints, but the enlightening 2023 book Ordinary Things Will Be Signs for Us gathers her photography, which brings terrific insight into the joyous ways she saw the world.

The 2021 documentary Rebel Hearts tracks the trailblazing history of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, who stood up to the most conservative factions of the Catholic Church — and it’s currently streaming on Max.

Corita Kent. Art and Soul. The biography., published by Angel City Press in 2015, tells the story of the artist’s work and life.

The Hammer Museum, which has numerous works by Corita in its collection, has an essay by Susan Dackerman that examines the artist’s connection to Pop.

Someday is Now: The Art of Corita Kent, published in 2013 by DelMonico Books, accompanied a traveling exhibition of her work that was on view at the now-defunct Pasadena Museum of California Art, and it features tributes from the artists she influenced as well as beautiful reproductions of her work.

 

Around the Internet

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"Wedding in East Los Angeles," from Gusmano Cesaretti's "East LA Diary," 1972. (Gusmano Cesaretti / Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens)

  • Hyperallergic’s Matt Stromberg has a good story about the work of LA photographer Gusmano Cesaretti, whose archives were just acquired by the Huntington.
  • The Art Museum of the Americas in DC has cancelled a pair of shows that feature Black and queer artists following Trump’s executive orders. 
  • One of those shows was inspired by a book by Andil Gosine that explored art, activism and homosexuality in Caribbean culture
  • What Trump’s pivot on Ukraine could mean for the country’s cultural heritage
  • Chinese architect Liu Jiakun has won the Pritzker Architecture Prize
  • An exhibition in New York by the artist known as American Artist imagines the settings of Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower
  • Amalia Mesa-Bains: Archaeology of Memory, the first major retrospective of the important Chicana artist, is on view at the Cheech in Riverside. I wrote about why this show is important back in 2023, when the exhibition first opened in Berkeley. 
  • Like cake? A retrospective of the work of Wayne Thiebaud is scheduled to land at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco later this month. 
  • The 99% Invisible podcast has a fascinating episode devoted to one of the most popular paintings of Jesus ever created.
  • Signing off with this fantastic piece by William Poundstone, who gets into the kitschy paintings that appear in the TV show Severance (which I’m addicted to).

Thank you for reading! And see you next week!

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