Born in 1920 in Roanoke, Virginia, Dorothy, at the age of five, was already navigating her artistic path. When it came time to think about college, her parents were uneasy about permitting her to attend art school – art schools were thought to attract those who were not so nice—until a trusted man of the cloth praised her artistic skill as a gift from God. Dorothy was allowed to attend Radford University in Virginia, and later, the Maryland Institute, College of Art in Baltimore.
Dorothy moved to New York in 1943 where she worked as Assistant Art Director for the B. Altman and Company department store and , the Clay Club, and and Atelier 17 where she was influenced by printmaker Stanley William Hayter (1901-1988)
While in New York, she married Bernard Israel, had three children, and for several years owned and operated a Greenwich Village nightclub with her husband all while continuing to paint, study, teach, and advocate.