Alice Woods Ullman

Alice Newton Woods Ullman (November 22, 1871 – July 24, 1959) was an American painter, illustrator, and writer.

Ullman was born in Goshen, Indiana, the daughter of future federal judge William Allen Woods.

[1] While in Paris she came to know Margaret Cravens, Gertrude Stein, Ezra Pound, and other members of the American expatriate arts community.

The couple married in Paris and lived abroad, but after their separation she returned to the United States, where from 1917 until 1925 she was active in Provincetown, Massachusetts.

Ullman wrote and illustrated six books dealing with women's liberation between 1902 and 1927;[1] one of these, the 1912 novel Fame Seekers, was based on her time as a student in Paris.

The frontispiece of her 1904 novel, A Gingham Rose was her own creation.