An Escape by Doris Meyer Chatham

An Escape by Doris Meyer Chatham

An Escape

Doris Meyer Chatham

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.
Title

An Escape

 
Artist
Year
1957  
Technique
color serigraph 
Image Size
19 1/8 x 13" image 
Signature
pencil signed, lower right 
Edition Size
27 of 27  
Annotations
titled in pencil, lower left; dated '57 after signature 
Reference
 
Paper
smooth, ivory wove 
State
published 
Publisher
artist 
Inventory ID
18527 
Price
$425.00 
Description

A vibrant composition in silkscreen exemplifying mid-century American Abstract Expressionism. The image is developed using a collection of delicate, line, shapes and colors arranged to add substance and depth and the viewer is led through a forest of kelp or trees. Chatham's "An Escape" appears at once spontaneous and intentional, and her use of transparent inks provides luminesence.

In the late 1950s Doris Meyer travelled to France to study printmaking with Stanley William Hayter, who had returned to Paris and re-opened Atelier 17 in 1950. She continued to correspond with Hayter throughout the fifties and sixties.

Doris Meyer Chatham (née Doris Hoag Clark) was born in Toronto, Canada on 10 January 1923. She earned her BFA degree from the Rice Institute (now known as Rice University) in Houston, Texas. On 19 February 1945, she married German born Professor Heinrich Meyer, (also known by the pseudonyms Robert O. Barlow, H. K. Houston Meyer, and Hugo Cartesius), a linguist and Goethe scholar who taught at Rice Institute. In 1938 Meyer wrote a letter to then German Chancellor Adolf Hitler and requested an audience in which he wanted to explain how the Nazis' anti-Jewish campaign was affecting American feelings, the offer was refused but Meyer, who had been naturalized in 1935, was taken into custody by the FBI on March 8, 1943, and turned over to the Immigration and Naturalization Department. He spent the next three months in a concentration camp in Kenedy, Texas. Meyer's case was the first de-naturalization case in the Southern District of Texas and the first civil action filed by the U.S. attorney's office to revoke the citizenship rights of Houstonians born in Germany. Upon appeal Meyer's citizenship was reversed in April 1944 by the Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans since the court believed that a naturalized citizen had the same freedom of thinking and speaking as a native citizen.

In 1945, 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 Doris and Heinrich Meyer were divorced in early 1955, she started driving to parts unknown and ended up in the Pacific Northwest. In Seattle she studied printmaking at the University of Washington with Glenn Alps who taught her lithography and collagraphy. After graduation she landed a job teaching art at Everett Junior College in Washington.

Doris moved to Marin County, California and began teaching printmaking at the College of Marin where she met and later married the painter Russell Chatham. She experimented with viscosity printing, developed at Atelier 17, and studied independently with Kaiko Moti. Most of her color prints, such as "An Escape," were done as experiments and were not printed in large editions, in this case 27 impressions.

 

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.