Shadorne is 100% correct. You should move your listening chair away from the back wall. Try getting about 6 feet away from the speakers. So your ears might be 3 feet from the back wall and the front of the speakers 3 feet from that wall. Give that a try and let us know. It is cheaper than room acoustic treatments I believe.
If you move six feet from your speakers you will also, very likely have to bring the speakers together as well in order to keep the soundstage focused. This, in turn, may also reduce your soundstage and imaging abilities to a smaller space. This is based upon my own experience with various speakers in my own space. I can tell you that in my room of similar proportions, that arrangement also looks pretty ridiculous and closes the room off to a significant degree. You mentioned you have a coffee table which makes this proposition even more challenging. It rates extremely low in the WAF. Hell, I don't even like it, in every way imaginable (visually and acoustically). Diffusion on the back wall is a far more pleasing solution for me. BTW, speaking of the coffee table - you did mention that you'd tried moving it away from the chair. You might try two other things: eliminate the table all together and see what that sounds like. The second is to leave the table in the same place you use it and find the actual reflection points on the table. To do this place a mirror flat on the table surface. Sit in your listening position and move the mirror around the table until you can see the reflection of each speaker in the mirror (two separate spots on the table). As a test, in those spots place a pillow or a small plant or something that my otherwise absorb or diffuse the sound. See if that makes a difference for you.
Keep in mind, that none of this stuff may occur to you to make a difference at all, or perhaps it makes a difference, but one you'd really have to make an effort to hear yourself. There's no doubt the physical changes in the room do make a difference, and that treating a room can have a positive effect. The question really is do you hear it, is it worth it to you, and do you care about the differences it does make. If the answer is no after giving it a try, then keep on enjoying what you have!