Hoyem was born on 1 December 1935 in
Sioux Falls, South Dakota. He graduated from
Pomona College and served in the U.S. Navy. In 1961 he became a partner with Dave Haselwood in
The Auerhahn Press, a small literary press that published
Beat Generation writers. Hoyem designed books for trade publishers, including a series of Richard Brautigan’s novels. He learned typography, typesetting and printing by working part-time at the Grabhorn Press. In 1966 he formed Grabhorn-Hoyem in partnership with Robert Grabhorn, the surviving proprietor of the Grabhorn Press, which he established in 1920 with his brother, Edwin. After Grabhorn's death in 1973, Hoyem founded the Arion Press with the equipment and type collection of the Grabhorns, including rare types and outstanding faces from European foundries destroyed in World War II. Hoyem took the press's name from the Greek poet of legend who was saved by a dolphin. From 1974 to 2018, he published 113 limited-edition books under the Arion Press imprint, including such monumental undertakings as Melville's
Moby-Dick, Joyce's
Ulysses, and a folio
Bible. The scholar James D. Hart, writing in
Fine Printing: The San Francisco Tradition, characterized Hoyem's books "as marked by an unusual inventiveness", praising the handset folio edition of
Moby-Dick as a "majestic volume", among Arion's "virtuoso performances". According to
Biblio magazine, "Many authorities rank this edition of
Moby-Dick as one of the two or three greatest American fine-press books." Hoyem's most ambitious project is the
Folio Bible, with production extending over several years. This is likely to be the last Bible to be printed from metal type, following in the tradition of large-format Bibles printed from
movable type that extends from
Johannes Gutenberg through
John Baskerville, the
Doves Press, and the
Oxford Lectern Bible, designed by
Bruce Rogers.
The Christian Science Monitor reported that "From melting the lead, to proofreading, to physically lifting 40-pound frames of type, the consensus of Andrew Hoyem, as publisher of the Arion Press, and his small crew of eight craftspeople, is that a hand-wrought Bible is intrinsically valuable”. Hoyem’s Arion Press books are in the collections of museums and libraries including The New York Public Library, the British Library, the Bibliothèque Nationale, Duke University Library, Stanford University Library, and the University of Iowa Library. Hoyem’s books are exhibited in museums and galleries. Arion Press’s
The Apocalypse and
On Certainty were included among the 100 great books of the 20th century in “A Century of Artist Books” at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1994, and “A Century for the Century” at New York's
Grolier Club. Hoyem’s limited editions have been reissued in trade editions including reduced format editions of its
Moby-Dick (with artist Barry Moser) used in college courses, and of Brillat-Savarin’s
Physiology of Taste (with artist Wayne Thiebaud). == Preservation ==