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A book cover with several photographs and text reading "Corita Kent: Ordinary Things Will Be Signs for Us."

Corita Kent: Ordinary Things Will Be Signs for Us

$45.00

by Julie Ault (Editor), Jason Fulford (Editor), Jordan Weitzman (Editor), Olivian Cha (Contributor)

Corita Kent’s photographs of vernacular inspiration―from street signs and folk art to kites, parades and fairs.

Corita Kent, formerly Sister Mary Corita, is known for her exuberant, colorful serigraphs and her teaching, as evidenced in her lively art classes. As a Catholic nun from 1936 until 1968, Corita lived and worked in the Immaculate Heart of Mary community in Los Angeles. She taught lettering and layout, image finding, and art structure for 20 years in Immaculate Heart College’s art department. There, she screened multiple films simultaneously, hosted guest thinkers including Saul Bass, Buckminster Fuller and John Cage, and guided the making of large-scale collaborative projects with students.
Corita regularly took her students out for looking sessions at a used car lot or an art exhibition. While constantly looking and discovering visually, Corita shot thousands of 35 mm slides documenting references, the IHC milieu and the art department processes. For Corita, the vernacular environs of advertising, supermarkets and the city’s media landscape were a source of inspiration and raw material. Her slide collection encompasses a wide range of subjects: cookies, coke bottles, toys, presents, experiments, projects, Mary’s Day celebrations stemming from Corita’s classroom, flowers, magazines, seeds, puppets, visits with Charles and Ray Eames, street signs, trade fairs, folk art, boxes, billboards and kites. Drawing from the Corita Art Center’s vast slide collection, 
Ordinary Things Will Be Signs for Us embodies Corita’s philosophy of looking.

Paperback, 144 pages.