[1] While living in Italy, Tiemer owned a studio in Anticoli Corrado, a hill village populated by artists.
[2] The Marsden Hartley Memorial Collection at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine includes his correspondence with Tiemer and writer Gertrude Stein.
Tiemer exhibited at the Salons of America's show at the American Art Association - Anderson Galleries in New York City in 1931.
[14] In 1940, Tiemer's sonnet "October Rose" won first prize in a poetry contest sponsored by the Manor Club in Pelham, New York.
[18] Tiemer's photograph titled "Summer's Child" appears in a photography collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
[21] Tiemer spent her winters in New York City and her summers at the family home called Gabriel on Dingley Island.
While visiting Maine for a birthday party, Tiemer had happened upon the property just as the previous owner put it up for sale.
[2] During her time on the island, Tiemer collected driftwood (that she termed sea-scoured wood and tidewood) and painted it using an abstract style.