1. Anna Alma-Tadema was a British artist and suffragette.

1. Anna Alma-Tadema was a British artist and suffragette.
Anna Alma-Tadema was influenced by her father, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, and showed her works at exhibitions with him and her step-mother, Laura Theresa Alma-Tadema.
Anna Alma-Tadema's work was shown at national exhibitions, including the Royal Academy of Arts and the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
Anna Alma-Tadema was recognized for her achievements as an artist at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago and the 1889 Paris Exhibition.
Anna Alma-Tadema's father married for the second time to Laura Epps in 1871, when Anna was four years old.
Laurense received her education at home and it is believed that Anna Alma-Tadema was home-schooled as well.
Anna Alma-Tadema appears at least twice in paintings by her father.
Anna Alma-Tadema's sister, Laurense, was a poet, painter, novelist, critic, playwright, and short story author.
One such example of Anna Alma-Tadema's portraits is Miss Tessa Gosse.
Anna Alma-Tadema made watercolours of the interior of the Alma-Tadema family house, Townshend House in Tichfield Terrace, near Regent's Park in London.
The Drawing Room, which Anna Alma-Tadema painted when she was a teenager, was exhibited in 1893 at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
Anna Alma-Tadema exhibited her works in England for approximately forty years, between 1885 and 1928.
Anna Alma-Tadema showed fifteen works at the Royal Academy between 1885 and 1928, including The Gold Room, Miss Tessa Gosse, The Misty Valley, and The Idler's Harvest.
Anna Alma-Tadema was committed to women's suffrage and signed the Some Supporters of the Women's Suffrage Movement in 1897.