William Anderson Coffin
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William Anderson Coffin | |
|---|---|
William Anderson Coffin with his dog, ca. 1900, unidentified photographer. William Anderson Coffin papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. | |
| Born | January 31, 1855 |
| Died | October 26, 1925 (aged 70) |
| Education | Yale University |
| Known for | Painting |
| Awards | Second Hallgarten Prize (1886)[1] |
William Anderson Coffin (1855–1925) was an American landscape and figure painter. He also was an art critic, working for the New York Post and Harper's Weekly. In 1917 he would be awarded the French Legion of Honor.
Coffin was born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, to James Gardiner Coffin and Isabella C. Anderson, on January 31, 1855. He graduated with a degree in fine art from Yale University in 1874. Three years later he would move to Paris, France, where he would study under Léon Bonnat.[2] In 1882 he moved to New York City. The Coffin family had a farm in Jennerstown, Pennsylvania, which is now the site of Pine Springs Camp, which would appear in many of his landscape paintings.[1] He died on October 26, 1925, in New York City.[2]