Maude Goodman

Having won a 'Queen's prize' scholastic art award in 1873[6] and then finishing her schooling, Goodman began to flourish as an artist in 1874.

Afterward however, no doubt becoming aware of the mistake, the Athenaeum did not make much further mention of Miss M. Goodman or her art, in its pages.

[10] Goodman exhibited her work at the Palace of Fine Arts at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois.

Goodman illustrated various editions of Raphael Tuck & Sons Children's books and postcards, with two of these containing poetry contributed by her husband, Arthur Scanes.

[13] Victorian periodicals often featured Goodman's life story and printed art, for example The Girl's Realm of 1902 reported on an interview that Henriette Corkran held with Maude.

[14] E.M. Forster in Howards End expresses an "amused superiority at [the] bad taste" of the aspiring working-class character Leonard Bast, whose apartment includes a print of "one of the masterpieces of Maud [sic] Goodman."

Dr. Aziz in A Passage to India "shares Leonard's taste in paintings: 'Aziz in an occidental moment would have hung Maud [sic] Goodmans on the walls.

Hush! (or, A Moment of Idleness .)
"Miss Maude Goodman," a biographical article in The Art Journal in 1889. [ 8 ]
A Poem , displayed at the Royal Academy in 1895.