She was a resident of Brighton, and exhibited there in 1881.[2] She also exhibited her works, one of which was a portrait of the writer Dollie Radford, at the Royal Academy under her married name Emma Keriman Mahomed in 1883 and 1884.[1]
She married the Reverend James Dean Keriman Mahomed in September 1883.[3]
References
^ abLivesey, Ruth (2007). Socialism, sex, and the culture of aestheticism in Britain, 1880-1914. Oxford: Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press. pp. 50, 139. ISBN9780197263983. OCLC84150728.
^Harris, Elree I. (1997). A gallery of her own : an annotated bibliography of women in Victorian painting. Scott, Shirley R. New York: Garland Pub. p. 229. ISBN9780815300403. OCLC36696419.