Welcome to impeachment week, in which we grow increasingly concerned about the fate of our fragile republic but also the aesthetics of Sen. Ted Cruz’s haircut. I’m
Carolina A. Miranda, arts and urban design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, here with your weekly dose of culture news and hamburger dispatches:
Artistic legacies
Shortly after abandoning her religious vows in 1968,
Corita Kent produced a series of 29 prints called “Heroes and Sheroes” that honored political and civil rights figures she admired. The prints mark a moment of departure, when Kent is increasingly appropriating images from mass media and, unshackled from the Catholic Church, her critiques of the powerful become more overt.