Elizabeth Kitchenman Coyne (June 21, 1892 – April 11, 1971) was a Pennsylvania impressionist painter, best known for her landscapes and paintings of horses.
[1] She then studied at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women (now Moore College of Art and Design) with Leopold Seyffert and later at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art with Cecilia Beaux, Edwin Blashfield, Hugh H. Breckenridge and Philip Leslie Hale.
At the Plastic Club in 1931, she received First Prize for Water Color for one of a trio of paintings of Niagara Falls.
[10][6] Other awards include the Alumnae Award Medal from the Women's School of Design, Philadelphia in 1931; the Alumnae Purchase Award from Moore College of Art and Design in 1934;[1][6] the Gold Medal of the Plastic Club in 1938;[11][6] and the Gold Medal of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1939.
[1] The Annual Oil Show at the Plastic Club ... Elizabeth Coyne’s “Flowers and Mirror,” which was awarded the Gold Medal, is a study in reflections—those of the vase in the mirror and of the brilliant flowers in the surface of the black vase.