CAMBRIDGE, MASS.- The Harvard Art Museums present Corita Kent and the Language of Pop, a special exhibition on display September 3, 2015 to January 3, 2016 at Harvard before travelling to the San Antonio Museum of Art, where it will be on view February 13 to May 8, 2016. The exhibition is curated by Susan Dackerman, the former Carl A. Weyerhaeuser Curator of Prints at the Harvard Art Museums (20052014) and current consultative curator of prints. Corita Kent was an activist nun who juxtaposed spiritual, pop cultural, literary, and political writings alongside symbols of consumer culture and modern life in order to create bold images and prints during the 1960s. Also known as Sister Mary Corita, Kent is often seen as a curiosity or an anomaly in the pop art movement. Corita Kent and the Language of Pop positions Kent and her work within the pop art idiom, showing how she is an innovative contemporary of Andy Warhol, Ed Ruscha, and other pop art icons. The exhibition also expands the current scholarship on Kents art, elevating the role of her artwork by identifying its place in the artistic and cultural movements of her time.
Corita Kent (American, 19181986) was a Roman Catholic nun, an artist, and an educator. From 1936 to 1968 she lived, studied, and taught at the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Los Angeles, and she headed the art department at the college there from 1964 to 1968. In 1968, Kent left Immaculate Heart and relocated to Boston, where she lived until her death in 1986. The screenprints she created during the 1960s are typical examples of pop art, embodying the vivid palette, focus on everyday subjects, and mass-produced quality of ephemeral objects. Corita Kent and the Language of Pop examines Kents screenprints as well as her 1971 design painted on the Boston Gas (now National Grid) tank, a roadside landmark in Boston.
The exhibition frames Kents work within the pop movement while also considering other prevailing artistic, social, and religious movements of the time. In particular, the exhibition explores how Kents work both responded to and advanced the concerns of Vatican II, a movement to modernize the Catholic Church and make it more relevant to contemporary society. The church advocated, among other changes to traditional liturgy, conducting the Mass in the local, vernacular language. Kent, like her pop art contemporaries, simultaneously turned to vernacular texts for inclusion in her prints, drawing from such colloquial sources as product slogans, street signs, and Beatles lyrics.
Because of Kents status as a nun, her biography has been the focus of most scholarship about her work, said Dackerman. However, when you examine her work alongside contemporary pop artists like Warhol and Ruscha, it becomes clear that she was a critical and relevant voice in the emerging pop discourse of the 1960s.
The exhibition grew out of conversations Dackerman had with Jennifer Roberts, the Elizabeth Cary Agassiz Professor of the Humanities in the Department of History of Art and Architecture (HAA) at Harvard, around the time that Roberts was teaching an undergraduate seminar on pop art during the Spring 2010 semester. Roberts often brought her students to examine prints in the museums collections, and these meetings generated discussions about Kents work as well as its relationship to the work of her better-known contemporaries such as Warhol, Ruscha, Roy Lichtenstein, and James Rosenquist, among others. The following semester, HAA professors Henri Zerner and Benjamin Buchloh taught a graduate seminar on reproductive technologies in the 1960s, which ignited interest in printed pop among Harvards graduate students in art history. Soon after, a project group came together, providing a forum for conversations about Kents work that ultimately led to the development of the exhibitions six central themes: Los Angeles, c. 1962; The Word; Salvation at the Supermarket; L.A. Traffic; The Political Landscape; and Boston, 1971: The Gas Tank. Kents papers, deposited at the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at Harvards Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, were an important resource to the team of scholars and students.
Installed in our generous new Special Exhibitions Gallery and reflecting our research and teaching mission, Corita Kent and the Language of Pop brilliantly recalibrates, recasts, reconsiders, and repositions Corita Kents remarkable work, said Deborah Martin Kao, the Landon and Lavinia Clay Chief Curator and Interim Co-Director of the Harvard Art Museums. In this enlightening special exhibition and its accompanying catalogue, Susan Dackerman and her collaborators also argue for a broadening of how we apprehend pop art, cleaving it from its iconic and seemingly unassailable historic wrapper and returning it to the immediacy of the beat of the streets of 1960s Los Angeles, New York, and even Boston.
Works on Display
Over 150 prints, along with a selection of films, books, and other works, are included in the exhibition. More than 60 of Kents prints, depicting language garnered from popular culture such as product slogans and road signs, appear alongside about the same number of works by her prominent contemporaries, including Warhol, Ruscha, Lichtenstein, Jim Dine, and Robert Indiana.
Rarely shown (and newly restored) films by Thomas Conrad and Baylis Glascock that feature Kent at Immaculate Heart in the 1960s are presented in the exhibition. The films include Glascocks Marys Day 1964, Marys Day 1965, and We Have No Art (1967), as well as Conrads Alleluia: Being a True Account of the Life and Times of Sister Mary Corita IHM (1967). Another screen in the exhibition is dedicated to slides taken by Kent and her associates at Immaculate Heart College during the 1950s and 60s. These slides depict their pop art projects as well as document visits to museums, galleries, and artists studios. The slides also include shots of magazine advertisements, supermarket goods, and street signs, many of which were incorporated into Kents screenprints.
In 1971, Kent created a bold, pop art design for the Boston Gas (now National Grid) tank located alongside I-93 south of downtown Boston. Her vivid rainbow swashes of color on the tank can be viewed as the culmination of her engagement with pop art, providing Boston with its own pop art monument, not unlike the Hollywood sign in Los Angeles. A large photo mural of the tank will appear in the exhibition, along with the first public presentation of the 7-inch-high wooden tank model on which Kent executed her design.
StoryCorps
In conjunction with Corita Kent and the Language of Pop, StoryCorps, one of the largest oral history projects of its kind, will collect stories about Kent and her rainbow swash design painted on the Boston Gas (now National Grid) tank in Boston. On September 4, 5, and 6, StoryCorps MobileBooth will be parked at Harvard Universitys Science Center plaza to record 40-minute interviews with participants who may have had local knowledge of Kent or who have lived in communities near the iconic gas tank. Each conversation will be preserved at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress. This oral history project is a partnership between StoryCorps, the Harvard Art Museums, and National Grid. Harvard Common Spaces has also provided support for the StoryCorps project. 90.9 WBUR, Bostons NPR news station, is the media partner for the StoryCorps project.