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Coppedge, who studied with William Merritt Chase at New York’s Art Students League, spent much of her career recording the villages, waterways and countryside of Bucks County, Pennsylvania in a style that was uniquely hers. Her paintings—marked by their bold, sometimes arbitrary colors—were described by critics as possessing “virility…if one may use that word in commenting upon the work of a woman painter….” Indeed, the vivid hues she employed contrasted with the more muted, naturalistic palettes of her New Hope artist colony colleagues.
She lived for a time in Lumberville, New Jersey, and exhibited frequently with “The Philadelphia Ten” between 1920 and 1935.