We recognize Andrew Hoyem, an at once formal and witty gentleman, and, as if in near contradiction, a distinguished poet of the funky Beat Generation who performed in San Francisco’s readings and events at the renowned City Lights Bookstore in the mid 1960s. Hoyem is a publisher of artists’ books, a sophisticated supporter and judge of fine art, and a dedicated ink-stained printer.
In 1974, he was also the founder of Arion Press in San Francisco. The press began as a true rarity—initially a one-man show. Hoyem learned to set type himself as a way to produce notable works from an assortment of writers drawn from the past, such as Herman Melville, with various poems up through the more recent and hip writings of pulp fiction king Jim Thomson. Among the wilder figures are Allen Ginsberg and the weird Edgar Allan Poe (with art by Arikawa). The texts by an international cast of writers, including Juan Rulfo and Alban Berg, were often paired with contemporary fine artists ranging from Enrique Chagoya to William Kentridge. Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities is visually interpreted by Wayne Thibaud, Emily Dickinson by Kiki Smith, and Porgy and Bess by Kara Walker.
Among the assembled celebrants were such expressive notables as the artist Julie Mehretu, whose intense abstractions grace the works of Hoyem’s newest collection of poems, with images of his fellow Beat poets of the 1960s. This book is aptly titled Resurgence and indeed represents a refreshingly revitalized and original period in Hoyem’s creative and personal life. Mehretu’s dynamic, vividly colored abstraction brings the poems into the present, as did her images for his edition of Sappho.
















