Eugene Paul Ullman

Eugene Paul Ullman (March 27, 1877 in New York City – April 30, 1953 in Paris, France) was an American Impressionist painter.

The Ullmans were part of the intellectual circle of Leo and Gertrude Stein, and friends with Arnold Bennett, Ezra Pound, Alan Seeger, and Booth Tarkington.

The couple and Pierre, along with son Paul and his family, fled from Paris to the United States in 1940, to escape the Nazi occupation of France.

Paul volunteered as an ambulance driver for the American Field Service during World War II, and secretly worked as a spy.

[3] He exhibited regularly at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts from 1902 to 1913, and was awarded PAFA's 1906 Temple Gold Medal for his Portrait of Madame Fisher.

Portrait of Madame Fisher (ca.1904), Indianapolis Museum of Art