Marie Yoho Dorsey is a visual artist working with photopolymer direct gravure and intaglio processes. Her work often begins in drawing, sustained through cycles of marking and erasure, where forms emerge slowly through revision and attention. What holds is not fully planned, but recognized over time and carried forward through translation into plate and print.
She approaches intaglio as an evolving system, where drawing, transfer, and print unfold through pressure, accumulation, and material response. Forms gather at a threshold of instability, held in tension between coherence and dispersal.
Her sense of space is shaped through studies in Sogetsu Ikebana in Tokyo under Hiroshi Teshigahara, where asymmetry and interval determine relation. She has exhibited internationally and received residencies including MacDowell, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and Anderson Ranch Arts Center, with support from the Artist Relief Fund in New York. Her work has been reviewed in Art in Print (Susan Tallman), ART PAPERS, and dART International. She lives and works in St. Petersburg, Florida.