In her 1966 piece 'Tame It’s Not', she uses quotes from Winnie the Pooh, Kierkegaard, and an ad slogan for men’s cologne. Using everyday consumer items he was able to bring words and thoughts about her religion to a familiar product that people saw and used everyday. By creating juxtaposition between formally acknowledged or respected “art” and the art Corita saw in her everyday world—at the supermarket, on a walk, in the classroom—she elevated the banal to the holy.
