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Vintage Original Poster Sister Corita Kent Lithograph Pop Art "Life Without War"
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Surfside, FL
Corita Kent (American, 1918 - 1986)"We Can Create Life without War" Corita Billboard Peace Project Poster 1985 Corita Billboard Event - Part of Peace Week, January 17-24, 1985 San Lu...
Category

1980s Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Lithograph, Screen, Offset

Love You (unique signed watercolor on paper)
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in New York, NY
Sister Mary Corita Kent Love You, ca. 1975 Original signed watercolor painting on paper Signed in graphite pencil on the recto Floated and framed in white wood frame This is a unique...
Category

1970s Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Watercolor

BIRD FLAMING INTO THE SUN
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Santa Monica, CA
CORITA KENT (Sister Mary Corita) 1918–1986 BIRDS FLAMING INTO THE SUN, 1961 Color Serigraph, signed and and titled. Edition unknown.. Image 10 3/8 x 17 3/8 Inches. Full margins, she...
Category

1860s American Modern Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Passion is the Very Fact of God in Man
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Sister Mary Corita Kent Passion is the Very Fact of God in Man screenprint on Pellon rice paper 30 x40" edition of 50 1963 signed *Slight condition issues due to aging.
Category

1960s Contemporary Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

WORKING ON IT INCESSANTLY
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Santa Monica, CA
CORITA KENT (Sister Mary Corita) 1918–1986 WORKING ON IT INCESSANTLY, ca. 1970 Color serigraph. Signed and numbered in ink 200/. In generally good condition. Image 22 3/8 x 11 1/2, sheet 23 x 12 1/4 inches. Provenance: Marjorie Kauffman Graphics on original period label. Sister Corita is highly important in the development of modern use of serigraphy with highly charged social and political content expressed in strong colors and dynamic composition. She often made biblical and well as literary references as a major part of the composition. She taught printmaking at Immaculate Heart...
Category

1970s Abstract Expressionist Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Celebration of the Ordinary 2 by Sister Mary Corita Kent (INV# NP3241)
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Sister Mary Corita Kent Celebration of the Ordinary 2 screenprint on Pellon rice paper 30 x 40" edition of 50 1963 signed *Slight condition issues due to...
Category

1960s Contemporary Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Quaint Moonmarks by Sister Mary Corita Kent (INV# NP3242)
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Sister Mary Corita Kent Quaint Moonmarks (INV# NP3242) screenprint 30 x 40" edition 95 1963 signed
Category

1960s Contemporary Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Road Signs by Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent (INV# NP3245)
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Sister Mary Corita Road Signs screenprint paper size: 23 x 11.5" framed: 26 x 14.5" 1969 signed
Category

1960s Contemporary Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Quaint Moonmarks by Sister Mary Corita Kent (INV# NP3243)
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Sister Mary Corita Kent Quaint Moonmarks screenprint of Pellon rice paper 30 x 40" edition of 95 1963 signed * Slight condition issues due to age.
Category

1960s Contemporary Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

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"The Capture, " Jacob Lawrence, Harlem Renaissance, Black Art, Haitian Series
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Jacob Lawrence (1917 - 2000) The Capture of Marmelade (from The Life of Toussaint L'Ouverture series), 1987 Color screenprint on Bainbridge Two Ply Rag paper Sheet 32 1/8 x 22 1/16 inches Sight 29 3/4 x 19 1/4 inches A/P 1/30, aside from the edition of 120 Signed, titled, dated, inscribed "A/P" and numbered 1/30 in pencil, lower margin. Literature: Nesbett L87-2. A social realist, Lawrence documented the African American experience in several series devoted to Toussaint L’Ouverture, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, life in Harlem, and the civil rights movement of the 1960s. He was one of the first nationally recognized African American artists. “If at times my productions do not express the conventionally beautiful, there is always an effort to express the universal beauty of man’s continuous struggle to lift his social position and to add dimension to his spiritual being.” — Jacob Lawrence quoted in Ellen Harkins Wheat, Jacob Lawrence: The Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman Series of 1938 – 40. The most widely acclaimed African American artist of this century, and one of only several whose works are included in standard survey books on American art, Jacob Lawrence has enjoyed a successful career for more than fifty years. Lawrence’s paintings portray the lives and struggles of African Americans, and have found wide audiences due to their abstract, colorful style and universality of subject matter. By the time he was thirty years old, Lawrence had been labeled as the ​“foremost Negro artist,” and since that time his career has been a series of extraordinary accomplishments. Moreover, Lawrence is one of the few painters of his generation who grew up in a black community, was taught primarily by black artists, and was influenced by black people. Lawrence was born on September 7, 1917,* in Atlantic City, New Jersey. He was the eldest child of Jacob and Rosa Lee Lawrence. The senior Lawrence worked as a railroad cook and in 1919 moved his family to Easton, Pennsylvania, where he sought work as a coal miner. Lawrence’s parents separated when he was seven, and in 1924 his mother moved her children first to Philadelphia and then to Harlem when Jacob was twelve years old. He enrolled in Public School 89 located at 135th Street and Lenox Avenue, and at the Utopia Children’s Center, a settlement house that provided an after school program in arts and crafts for Harlem children. The center was operated at that time by painter Charles Alston who immediately recognized young Lawrence’s talents. Shortly after he began attending classes at Utopia Children’s Center, Lawrence developed an interest in drawing simple geometric patterns and making diorama type paintings from corrugated cardboard boxes. Following his graduation from P.S. 89, Lawrence enrolled in Commerce High School on West 65th Street and painted intermittently on his own. As the Depression became more acute, Lawrence’s mother lost her job and the family had to go on welfare. Lawrence dropped out of high school before his junior year to find odd jobs to help support his family. He enrolled in the Civilian Conservation Corps, a New Deal jobs program, and was sent to upstate New York. There he planted trees, drained swamps, and built dams. When Lawrence returned to Harlem he became associated with the Harlem Community Art Center directed by sculptor Augusta Savage, and began painting his earliest Harlem scenes. Lawrence enjoyed playing pool at the Harlem Y.M.C.A., where he met ​“Professor” Seifert, a black, self styled lecturer and historian who had collected a large library of African and African American literature. Seifert encouraged Lawrence to visit the Schomburg Library in Harlem to read everything he could about African and African American culture. He also invited Lawrence to use his personal library, and to visit the Museum of Modern Art’s exhibition of African art in 1935. As the Depression continued, circumstances remained financially difficult for Lawrence and his family. Through the persistence of Augusta Savage, Lawrence was assigned to an easel project with the W.P.A., and still under the influence of Seifert, Lawrence became interested in the life of Toussaint L’Ouverture, the black revolutionary and founder of the Republic of Haiti. Lawrence felt that a single painting would not depict L’Ouverture’s numerous achievements, and decided to produce a series of paintings on the general’s life. Lawrence is known primarily for his series of panels on the lives of important African Americans in history and scenes of African American life. His series of paintings include: The Life of Toussaint L’Ouverture, 1937, (forty one panels), The Life of Frederick Douglass, 1938, (forty panels), The Life of Harriet Tubman, 1939, (thirty one panels), The Migration of the Negro,1940 – 41, (sixty panels), The Life of John Brown, 1941, (twenty two panels), Harlem, 1942, (thirty panels), War, 1946 47, (fourteen panels), The South, 1947, (ten panels), Hospital, 1949 – 50, (eleven panels), Struggle: History of the American People, 1953 – 55, (thirty panels completed, sixty projected). Lawrence’s best known series is The Migration of the Negro, executed in 1940 and 1941. The panels portray the migration of over a million African Americans from the South to industrial cities in the North between 1910 and 1940. These panels, as well as others by Lawrence, are linked together by descriptive phrases, color, and design. In November 1941 Lawrence’s Migration series was exhibited at the prestigious Downtown Gallery in New York. This show received wide acclaim, and at the age of twenty four Lawrence became the first African American artist to be represented by a downtown ​“mainstream” gallery. During the same month Fortune magazine published a lengthy article about Lawrence, and illustrated twenty six of the series’ sixty panels. In 1943 the Downtown Gallery exhibited Lawrence’s Harlem series, which was lauded by some critics as being even more successful than the Migration panels. In 1937 Lawrence obtained a scholarship to the American Artists School in New York. At about the same time, he was also the recipient of a Rosenwald Grant for three consecutive years. In 1943 Lawrence joined the U.S. Coast Guard and was assigned to troop ships that sailed to Italy and India. After his discharge in 1945, Lawrence returned to painting the history of African American people. In the summer of 1947 Lawrence taught at the innovative Black Mountain College in North Carolina at the invitation of painter Josef Albers. During the late 1940s Lawrence was the most celebrated African American painter in America. Young, gifted, and personable, Lawrence presented the image of the black artist who had truly ​“arrived”. Lawrence was, however, somewhat overwhelmed by his own success, and deeply concerned that some of his equally talented black artist friends had not achieved a similar success. As a consequence, Lawrence became deeply depressed, and in July 1949 voluntarily entered Hillside Hospital in Queens, New York, to receive treatment. He completed the Hospital series while at Hillside. Following his discharge from the hospital in 1950, Lawrence resumed painting with renewed enthusiasm. In 1960 he was honored with a retrospective exhibition and monograph prepared by The American Federation of Arts. He also traveled to Africa twice during the 1960s and lived primarily in Nigeria. Lawrence taught for a number of years at the Art Students League in New York, and over the years has also served on the faculties of Brandeis University, the New School for Social Research, California State College at Hayward, the Pratt Institute, and the University of Washington, Seattle, where he is currently Professor Emeritus of Art. In 1974 the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York held a major retrospective of Lawrence’s work that toured nationally, and in December 1983 Lawrence was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. The most recent retrospective of Lawrence’s paintings was organized by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2020, and was accompanied by a major catalogue. Lawrence met his wife Gwendolyn Knight...
Category

1970s American Modern Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen, Paper

Surrealist Architectural Landscape "Fall for it" 1970s Chicago Modernist
By William Schwedler
Located in Surfside, FL
This serigraph has never been framed. Chicago born Modernist. Showed at Andrew Crispo Gallery and Tibor de Nagy Gallery. Schwedler could not help but be influenced by the local artistic milieu particularly with those contemporaries and friends who formed the Hairy Who in the Mid - 1960's Schwedler's Paintings from the beginning to his young end were ripe with a surreal, abstract poetry filled with references to landscapes, architecture, texture (cracked), line (broken,chopped, and Pulled to pieces), and delicate, but voluptuous color. Studying at the Art institute of Chicago with his friends Cynthia Carlson, Jim Nutt...
Category

1970s American Modern Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Previously Available Items
We Can Create Life Without War by Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent (INV# NP4057)
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Mary (Sister Corita) Corita Kent We Can Create Life Without War (INV# NP4057) serigraph print image: 16 x 20" archive id: 84 -05 1984 signed edition of...
Category

1980s Contemporary Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

“A Calm Always”
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Southampton, NY
Original screen print on card stock by the well know pop artist, Sister Mary Corida Kent. Signed in pen lower right. Circa 1968. The quote used in the screen print are the words of the well known Jesuit priest, poet, playwright and anti-war Vietnam activist Daniel Berrigan who was a personal friend of the artist. Condition is very good. Some mild fading consistent with age. The artwork is housed in its original bleached wood 1960’s frame. Provenance: Forsythe Gallery, Inc. Ann Arbor Michigan. Biography from the Archives of askART Sister Mary Corita Kent, once the nation's best-known nun, won fame as a serigraph artist. Her bright, colorful silk-screen prints were the rage of the 1960s. She designed the United States' first "Love" postage stamp. Mary Corita Kent was born in Fort Dodge, Iowa in 1918, then moved with her family to Vancouver, British Columbia, in 1920. Two years later they moved to Los Angeles, where she grew up. She joined the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary there in 1938. She received her bachelor's degree from Immaculate Heart College in 1941, followed by a master's in art history 10 years later from the University of Southern California. Popularly known as "Sister Mary Corita," she turned to the silk-screen process in 1950. Her large compositions combine quotations, often from the Bible or modern poetry, with religious or secular images. During her career as an artist and teacher, Kent also designed greeting cards and book covers. She achieved fame in the early 1960s with her brightly colored silkscreen posters. Some of her work includes excerpts from the writings of Carl Jung, e.e. cummings and Rainer Maria Rilke. She began adding words to her designs because, she said, "I have been nuts about words and their shape since I was very young." Sister Mary Corita became one of our country's most celebrated artists and gained international fame through her creative, magical use of color and words. As a muralist, her critically acclaimed 40-foot mural for the Vatican Pavilion at the 1964 New York World's Fair also brought her worldwide attention. She taught at Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles, the art department of which, under her creative direction, established itself as a center for the art of learning as well as the learning of art. Buckminster Fuller described his visit to the department as "among the most fundamentally inspiring experiences of my life." As a teacher, she was known as a challenger, a free-thinker, a celebrator, an encourager. She taught her students that one of the most important rules, when looking at art or watching films, was never to allow yourself to blink. One might miss something extremely valuable. And what the students cherished most about her competence as a teacher was that she always made eye-contact with each individual, giving herself to each charge entirely. Perhaps becoming a celebrity came too soon for the nun. It was something she never asked to be, but she carried the burdens of stardom with grace, kindness, and loving warmth. She never was arrogant, and accepted the status because she believed it would help the College of the Immaculate Heart where she was teaching, and she thought it would be good for her community of Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Sister Corita became a symbol of the modern nun and was often the target of conservative Catholics, particularly when she turned to regular street dress...
Category

1960s Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen, Archival Paper

Let the Whole World Keep Holiday (Pop Art print)
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Wilton Manors, FL
Sister Mary Corita Kent (1918-1986). Let the Whole World Keep Holiday, 1955. Serigraph on paper, image measures 15.75 x 21.75 inches; 24 x 29.5 inches framed. Signed and dated in pencil by artist, lower margin. Minor toning to page with no color fading. Sister Mary Corita Kent, once the nation's best-known nun, won fame as a serigraph artist. Her bright, colorful silk-screen prints were the rage of the 1960s. She designed the United States' first "Love" postage stamp. Mary Corita Kent was born in Fort Dodge, Iowa in 1918, then moved with her family to Vancouver, British Columbia, in 1920. Two years later they moved to Los Angeles, where she grew up. She joined the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary there in 1938. She received her bachelor's degree from Immaculate Heart College in 1941, followed by a master's in art history 10 years later from the University of Southern California. Popularly known as "Sister Mary Corita," she turned to the silk-screen process in 1950. Her large compositions combine quotations, often from the Bible or modern poetry, with religious or secular images. During her career as an artist and teacher, Kent also designed greeting cards and book covers. She achieved fame in the early 1960s with her brightly colored silkscreen posters. Some of her work includes excerpts from the writings of Carl Jung, e.e. cummings and Rainer Maria Rilke. She began adding words to her designs because, she said, "I have been nuts about words and their shape since I was very young." Sister Mary Corita became one of our country's most celebrated artists and gained international fame through her creative, magical use of color and words. As a muralist, her critically acclaimed 40-foot mural for the Vatican Pavilion at the 1964 New York World's Fair also brought her worldwide attention. She taught at Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles, the art department of which, under her creative direction, established itself as a center for the art of learning as well as the learning of art. Buckminster Fuller described his visit to the department as "among the most fundamentally inspiring experiences of my life." As a teacher, she was known as a challenger, a free-thinker, a celebrator, an encourager. She taught her students that one of the most important rules, when looking at art or watching films, was never to allow yourself to blink. One might miss something extremely valuable. And what the students cherished most about her competence as a teacher was that she always made eye-contact with each individual, giving herself to each charge entirely. Perhaps becoming a celebrity came too soon for the nun. It was something she never asked to be, but she carried the burdens of stardom with grace, kindness, and loving warmth. She never was arrogant, and accepted the status because she believed it would help the College of the Immaculate Heart where she was teaching, and she thought it would be good for her community of Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Sister Corita became a symbol of the modern nun and was often the target of conservative Catholics, particularly when she turned to regular street dress...
Category

Mid-20th Century Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Today is the First Day of the Rest of Your Life
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in New York, NY
Sister Corita Kent Today is the First Day of the Rest of Your Life, 2976 Silkscreen on wove paper Edition of 200 Pencil signed on the front; unnumbered Held in vintage 1970s metal frame with Lois Burnett gallery stamp on the back Provenance: Lois Burnett Gallery, Melrose Place...
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1970s Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Celebration of the Ordinary by Sister Mary Corita Kent (INV# NP3240)
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Sister Mary Corita Kent Celebration of the Ordinary screenprint on (Pellon) rice paper 30 x 40" edition of 50 1963 signed * Slight condition issues due t...
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1960s Contemporary Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

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Screen

PIGEONS FLYING
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
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CORITA KENT (Sister Mary Corita) 1918–1986 PIGEONS FLYING, Color serigraph. Signed and titled in ink. Unnumbered. Image, 10 1/2 x 13 3/4. In generally good condition. Colors possibl...
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1960s Abstract Expressionist Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

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Screen

The Rights of All Men
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Fairlawn, OH
Reference: Corita Art Center Catalog # 64.27 Edition: Unlimited, un-numbered
Category

1960s Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Someday is Now, Pop Art Silkscreen by Sister Corita Kent 1964
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Long Island City, NY
A contemporary of Andy Warhol and Ed Ruscha, Corita Kent (aka Sister Mary Corita) created eye-popping screenprints and drawings that combined corporate logos with excerpts from some of the artist’s favorite writers, creating an intersection between religious euphoria and advertising hyperbole. A sister of the Immaculate Heart of Mary...
Category

1960s Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Parable of the Artichoke, Pop Art Silkscreen by Sister Corita Kent 1964
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Long Island City, NY
A contemporary of Andy Warhol and Ed Ruscha, Corita Kent (aka Sister Mary Corita) created eye-popping screenprints and drawings that combined corporate logos with excerpts from some of the artist’s favorite writers, creating an intersection between religious euphoria and advertising hyperbole. A sister of the Immaculate Heart of Mary...
Category

1960s Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

I Love You Very, Pop Art Silkscreen by Sister Corita Kent 1978
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Long Island City, NY
A contemporary of Andy Warhol and Ed Ruscha, Corita Kent (aka Sister Mary Corita) created eye-popping screenprints and drawings that combined corporate logos with excerpts from some of the artist’s favorite writers, creating an intersection between religious euphoria and advertising hyperbole. A sister of the Immaculate Heart of Mary...
Category

1960s Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

'H', I carry your heart, Pop Art Silkscreen by Sister Corita Kent 1968
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Long Island City, NY
A contemporary of Andy Warhol and Ed Ruscha, Corita Kent (aka Sister Mary Corita) created eye-popping screenprints and drawings that combined corporate logos with excerpts from some ...
Category

1960s Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

'A' I Love that one, Pop Art Silkscreen by Sister Corita Kent 1968
By Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent
Located in Long Island City, NY
A contemporary of Andy Warhol and Ed Ruscha, Corita Kent (aka Sister Mary Corita) created eye-popping screenprints and drawings that combined corporate logos with excerpts from some ...
Category

1960s Pop Art Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent Art

Materials

Screen

Mary Corita (sister Corita) Kent art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent art available for sale on 1stDibs. If you’re browsing the collection of art to introduce a pop of color in a neutral corner of your living room or bedroom, you can find work that includes elements of blue, green and other colors. You can also browse by medium to find art by Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent in screen print, archival paper, paint and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 20th century and is mostly associated with the contemporary style. Not every interior allows for large Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent art, so small editions measuring 6 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Hiroki Morinoue, Paula Scher, and Emily Joyce. Mary Corita (Sister Corita) Kent art prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $950 and tops out at $8,000, while the average work can sell for $3,800.

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