In the
Arts Council England series of touring exhibitions,
Six Young Painters, Mead exhibited in 1964 with other artists including
Peter Blake,
William Crozier,
David Hockney,
Bridget Riley and
Euan Uglow. Mead joined the
London Group of artists in 1960. The
New Statesman singled her out, when critic
David Sylvester remarked she "tends to affirm the supremacy of light, as women's painting often does." Holden, her partner said "Dorothy sticks to her principals, but like myself and Bomberg was an outsider". In 1964, Mead arrived as a lecturer at
Goldsmiths College "like a breath of fresh air" according to pupil and painter Barry Martin. She swept aside the old gentlemanly bohemian and class pretensions that she thought "stubborn preconceptions". Her family saw her "living on the edge" of reality all the time. She worked in a garret studio in
Ladbroke Grove, yet went up to
Berkeley Square to buy paints. She was described by Dennis Creffield, artist and fellow student of Bomberg, as having an "abundant personality...a great love of art...stylish in appearance." Her daring, precarious act of existential expressionism can be seen in
The Acrobat, an exhibition of 1970 at
Borough Road Gallery. Mead was President of the London Group from 1971 to 1973, succeeding
Andrew Forge, a progressive art historian with whom she was long associated, and also had an affair with. Mead spent two spells teaching at
Morley College: between 1963 and 1965 she taught 'Painting', and from 1973 to 1975 she taught 'Drawing & Painting' ("for advanced students of some considerable experience") and 'Improvisation from the Model' in the Morley Summer Painting School. Mead was also a part-time lecturer at
Chelsea College of Art in London between 1962 and 1964. She was a feminist with a principled individualism - she once remarked that if she changed her name to George, she stood a greater chance of selling her work! == Exhibitions and works in museum collections ==