Dorothy Rieber Joralemon

[3] After college, she spent time in France, as a Red Cross canteen worker during World War I.

[3] Joralemon showed work at exhibitions of the American Abstract Artists, and appeared at the Golden Gate International Exposition (GGIE), but by the 1950s she was forced to stop her art career due to problems with her eyesight.

[8] In 1919, Rieber married Ira B. Joralemon, a geologist and mining engineer; they had known each other since childhood.

[9] They lived for many years in Berkeley, in a home at 168 Southampton Avenue designed by Bernard Maybeck.

[13] Her artwork is found in various collections including that of the Mills College Art Museum.