Fern Isabel Coppedge  (American, 1888-1951) 

whitespace
Find works of art, auction results & sale prices of artist Fern Isabel Coppedge at galleries and auctions worldwide.
envelope Get email alerts about this artist!  
Artworks for sale (5)

Galleries
Artworks (5)
Dealers selling (7)
Dealers wanting to buy (3)

Auction Houses
In upcoming auctions (1)

Price Database*
Past auction results (227)

Market Reports*

Calendar
Exhibitions (1)
Auctions (1)

Monographs

More Information
Biography & Links
* paid service

Artworks for sale (5)

All Sellers (5) 
|
|
 
  sort by: 

Fern Isabel Coppedge, Snow covered valley

 

Fern Isabel Coppedge
Snow covered valley
Auction: Jun 3, 2012
Freeman's
lot detail | entire auction
Fern Isabel Coppedge, From the Hill Top

 

Fern Isabel Coppedge
From the Hill Top
Godel & Co. Fine Art
Fern Isabel Coppedge, Mountain Creek, circa 1940's

 

Fern Isabel Coppedge
Mountain Creek, circa 1940's
Gratz Gallery and Conservation Studio
Fern Isabel Coppedge, Bucks County Scene

 

Fern Isabel Coppedge
Bucks County Scene
Avery Galleries
Fern Isabel Coppedge, Autumn Gold, Lumerville

 

Fern Isabel Coppedge
Autumn Gold, Lumerville
Plymouth Meeting Gallery
 

1922 - 1935   Member Philadelphia Ten
  Although she was born in Decatur, Illinois in 1883, Fern Coppedge spent most of her life in New Hope, PA. There she painted the Bucks County countryside and was associated with the New Hope School of American Impressionism.

She studied painting at the Art Institute of Chicago, the Art Students League in New York City, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. She also studied privately with Henry B. Snell, John F. Carlson, and William Merritt Chase.

Coppedge was a recipient of numerous awards. She received the Kansas City H.O. Dean Prize for landscape in 1917;the Kansas City Shield Prize in 1918;a Gold Medal from the Plastics Club of Philadelphia in 1924;a Gold Medal from the Exposition of Women’s Achievements in 1932;the Shillard Medal in Philadelphia in 1942;and awards from the National Association of Women Artists in 1922 and 1933;the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts; the City Museum of St. Joseph, Missouri; and the Chattanooga Club, Tennessee.

She was a member of the Fellowship of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts; the National Association of Women Artists; the Philadelphia Art Alliance; the Art League of New York; the Philadelphia "10," an alliance of women artists; North Shore Art Association; Gloucester Society of Artists; and the Plastic Club of Philadelphia.

Her work is represented in the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts; the Detroit Institute of Art; the American Embassy in Rio de Janeiro; Bryn Mawr College; the Pennsylvania State Capitol; the Witte Memorial Museum; the Thayer Museum in Kansas; Benjamin West Society in Swarthmore, PA; Reading Museum of Art; New Century Club of Philadelphia; and Western College in Oxford, Ohio.

In 1929, she designed her own house and studio in New Hope, remaining there and painting until her death in 1951 at age 67.


www.artcyclopedia.com