Date 1958
Technique Screenprint
Price $400.00
Exhibitor The Annex Galleries
Contact the Exhibitor 707.546.7352
artannex@aol.com
Buy From / See At This Exhibitor's Site

Souvenir is a color screenprint created in 1958 by American artist Doris Meyer Chatham (1923-2015). This impression is pencil signed Doris Meyer, and is titled, dated, and editioned 20/20. It was printed by the artist on smooth ivory wove paper and the image measures 19-1/8 x 13 inches.


Souvenir is a fiery image created by layering translucent, blazing tones and then finishing the image with sumi-like strokes of black. The image suggests souvenirs of memories: maple leaves turning color in autumn, or an open-air café, or a sunset seen through time-warped glass. Meyer’s keen sense of balance, color, and movement make this a hauntingly beautiful image.


Doris Hoag Clark, printmaker, painter, and educator, was born in Toronto, Canada in 1923, and she graduated from the Rice Institute (now known as Rice University) in Houston, Texas. In 1945, she married German born Professor Heinrich Meyer, a linguist and Goethe scholar who taught at Rice. That same year, the Meyers moved to Emmaus, Pennsylvania to open a cooperative farming community with Jerome Irving Rodale. Doris helped edit Rodale’s Organic Farming and Gardening and Prevention magazines and assisted with planting his first organic garden, one of the first in the United States.


After divorcing Meyer in 1955, Doris moved to the Pacific Northwest where she studied printmaking with Glenn Alps at the University of Washington. Under Alps she furthered her mastery of lithography and, in the late 1950s, she travelled to France to study printmaking at S.W. Hayter’s Atelier 17 in Paris. She studied with Kaiko Moti and experimented with viscosity printing. During this era, Meyer had a brief teaching career at Everett Community College in Everett, Washington.


Meyer later moved to Marin County, California where she taught art history, drawing and printmaking at the College of Marin. It was during this time that she met and later married the painter, Russell Chatham and they settled in Marshall, California. When their marriage failed, Meyer Chatham returned to the Pacific Northwest.


Doris Hoag Clark Meyer Chatham died on 8 June 2015 in Portland, Oregon.