In 1898, at the age of 16, Solomons entered the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art where she won a significant prize. Her classmates included future leading Irish artists including
Mary Swanzy,
Eva Hamilton (1876-1960) and
William J. Leech (1881-1968). She also attended the Chelsea School of Art from 1903-1906. A visit to the tercentenary exhibition of the work of
Rembrandt in
Amsterdam in 1903 impacted her creative practice and may have influenced her adoption of printmaking as her principal vehicle of expression. She studied under two of Ireland's leading artists,
Walter Osborne, who was another major influence, and
William Orpen. With her friends Cissie Beckett (aunt of
Samuel Beckett) and
Beatrice Elvery, she went to study in
Paris in
Colorossi's studio. On her return she exhibited in
Leinster Hall, Molesworth Street, with contemporaries such as Beatrice Elvery, Eva Hamilton and
Grace Gifford. Her work was also included in joint exhibitions with other artists at Mills Hall (1919, with Mary Duncan) and the Arlington Gallery,
London (1935, with Louise Jacobs). She also exhibited at her Great Brunswick Street studio in December 1926. Solomons illustrated
Padraic Colum's
The Road Round Ireland (1926) and
DL Kelleher's
The Glamour of Dublin in 1928. Originally published after the devastation of the
1916 Rising, the later edition features eight views of familiar locations in the city centre including
Merchant's Arch and
King's Inns. Her etching 'A Georgian Doorway' was included in
Katherine MacCormack's
Leabhar Ultuin in 1920. This publication featured illustrations by several prominent Irish artists and was sold in aid of the new children's hospital,
St Ultan's in Charlemont Street, Dublin that had been founded by two prominent members of Cumann na mBan, Dr
Kathleen Lynn and
Madeleine ffrench-Mullen. She painted landscapes and portraits, including of artist
Jack Yeats, politician
Arthur Griffiths, poet
Austin Clarke, and writers
James Stephens and
George Russell (AE). Solomons was elected an associate of the Royal Hibernian Academy of Arts in July 1925, but it was not until 1966 that she was elected an honorary member. Her work was included in the Academy's annual members’ exhibition every year for sixty years. == Personal life ==