3
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
Love Is Hard Work: The Art and Heart of Corita Kent
by Dan Paley
Sponsored
Synopsis
The story of how a Catholic nun become one of the twentieth century’s most significant artists and activists is brought to life in a colorful picture book biography.“To be fully alive is to work for the common good.” —Corita KentFrancis Kent always loved ...
The story of how a Catholic nun become one of the twentieth century’s most significant artists and activists is brought to life in a colorful picture book biography.
“To be fully alive is to work for the common good.” —Corita Kent
Francis Kent always loved making things. When she joined the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, she took the name Corita—meaning little heart—and devoted her life to what mattered most to her: art and religion. As an art teacher, Sister Corita emphasized practice and process over the final product and taught her students to experiment and break the rules. As a religious person, she turned her faith into concrete action and spoke out about the injustices she saw in the world. In the height of post-war consumerist culture, Corita, a contemporary of Andy Warhol, turned advertising on its head and wrote a new kind of scripture. Complimented by Victoria Tentler-Krylov’s vibrant illustrations that—like Corita’s work—incorporate typography and ads, author Dan Paley paints a portrait of the little-known but immensely influential pop-art nun whose messages are just as relevant today as they were in years past.
“To be fully alive is to work for the common good.” —Corita Kent
Francis Kent always loved making things. When she joined the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, she took the name Corita—meaning little heart—and devoted her life to what mattered most to her: art and religion. As an art teacher, Sister Corita emphasized practice and process over the final product and taught her students to experiment and break the rules. As a religious person, she turned her faith into concrete action and spoke out about the injustices she saw in the world. In the height of post-war consumerist culture, Corita, a contemporary of Andy Warhol, turned advertising on its head and wrote a new kind of scripture. Complimented by Victoria Tentler-Krylov’s vibrant illustrations that—like Corita’s work—incorporate typography and ads, author Dan Paley paints a portrait of the little-known but immensely influential pop-art nun whose messages are just as relevant today as they were in years past.
You May Also Like
House of Dusk
Deva Fagan
Park Avenue: A Novel
Renée Ahdieh
Music From Home: A Heartfelt Family Drama
Geraldine O'Neill
An Inspector Calls
J.B. Priestley
Under a Colder Sun (Khale the Wanderer, #1)
Greg James
Monkeys, Myths, and Molecules: Separating Fact from Fiction, and the Science of Everyday Life
Joe Schwarcz
Cookbooks Picks
View All
Texture Over Taste
Joshua Weissman
Food for Thought: Essays and Ruminations
Alton Brown
RecipeTin Eats Dinner
Nagi Maehashi
Peculiar Baking: A Practical Guide to Strange Confections
Nikk Alcaraz
Bite by Bite: Nourishments and Jamborees
Aimee Nezhukumatathil
The Funeral Ladies of Ellerie County
Claire Swinarski