Corita Kent was a Roman Catholic nun, artist, and activist who spent most of her life in Los Angeles. In the late 1960s, however, she left the Catholic Church and relocated to Boston. Her work frequently incorporates excerpts from poetry, literature, folklore, and religious texts. Made shortly after moving to Boston,
for the oaks quotes Walt Whitman’s
Song of Myself, 14 from
Leaves of Grass: “The press of my foot to the earth springs a hundred affections.” This poetry collection was a pivotal work for Whitman: inspired by the transcendentalist movement happening in and around Boston, he shifted his focus from religion and philosophy to the pleasures of the body and material world. This shift resembles Kent’s experience after leaving the Catholic Church to pursue her artistic career. Nature is a frequent theme in her work, such as in
for the oaks, a bold but simple print that references the landscape with abstracted shapes. Through the use of Whitman’s poetry, Kent exalts the sensuous connection between body and earth.
–Caroline Coxe ’20
From the exhibition: Lover EarthArt and Ecosexuality (May 30 – August 23, 2020)