Designer

Frank Morris

The Memphis portrait painter who learned to think in metal

He painted Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter for the cover of Newsweek. Then a U.S. Mint call for artists pulled him into a far older craft — and Frank Morris started carving history into coins.

Who he is

Frank Morris built one career, watched the world erase it, and built another out of the wreckage.

He was born and raised in Memphis, Tennessee. A boy's visit to the Brooks Museum — an exhibition of Time magazine covers — set the hook: he wanted to make pictures that ran in print. He got his wish. Morris became a working illustrator, painting for Newsweek and New York Magazine (his subjects included Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter, and their wives), illustrating Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew covers, and putting his art on the very first cover of Memphis magazine.

Then the ground shifted. As computers swallowed commercial illustration in the 1990s and 2000s, the assignments dried up. Morris did something harder than complain — he went back to school. He studied at the New York Academy of Art and the Art Students League and reinvented himself as a portrait painter, the kind whose work hangs in courthouses and city halls. His official portrait of former Memphis mayor Dick Hackett hangs in City Hall.

What carries through both careers is the thing that makes his coins work: an almost stubborn realism, and a portraitist's eye for the small human moment — a glance, a posture, the weight of a person standing still.

His craft and his Mint role

Morris is not a U.S. Mint employee. He belongs to the Mint's Artistic Infusion Program (AIP) — a roster of outside artists the Mint invites in to design coins and medals, while its own staff sculptor-engravers turn those drawings into the three-dimensional models that become dies (the hardened steel stamps that strike each coin). On a finished coin Morris is the designer; another artist is the sculptor. His initials appear on the side he designed.

That division shaped his learning curve. A portrait on paper can be any size and any depth; a coin is the size of a button and almost flat. Morris had to learn to say a great deal in low relief — the shallow raised modeling a coin allows — and to trust a sculptor to translate his intent into metal. He has named the appeal plainly: the work joins his two favorite things, history and art, and it demands deep research before a single line is drawn.

His break into the field came through a Mint open call, and his first commission was a serious one: three of the Code Talkers Recognition Congressional Medals, honoring Native American servicemen who used their tribal languages as unbreakable battlefield code in the World Wars. Morris designed the obverses — the "heads" side — for the Osage Nation, the Santee Sioux Nation, and the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate. The medals were unveiled at the U.S. Capitol in 2013.

From there came circulating and commemorative coins. He designed the reverse of the 2017 George Rogers Clark quarter — the last release in that year's America the Beautiful series — showing Clark wading his men through flooded plains toward Fort Sackville. And he designed the reverse of the 2015 U.S. Marshals Service silver dollar: a frontier marshal leaning on a post, a "WANTED IN FT. SMITH" poster in hand — a whole Western in one quiet pose. His most prominent commission came in 2021, when he designed the obverse of both the gold and silver coins in the National Law Enforcement Memorial and Museum program. The silver dollar's obverse — an officer kneeling beside a child reading a book, sitting on a basketball — is pure Morris: a single tender moment standing in for a much larger idea.

Key facts

Full name
Frank Kocian Morris
Nationality
American
From
Memphis, Tennessee
Training
Atelier of painter Paul Penczner; B.F.A. (honors), University of Memphis; New York Academy of Art; Art Students League
U.S. Mint role
Artistic Infusion Program (AIP) artist — outside designer, not a staff engraver
First Mint work
Three Code Talkers Recognition Congressional Medals (Osage, Santee Sioux, Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate), unveiled 2013
Notable U.S. coins
2017 George Rogers Clark quarter (reverse); 2015 U.S. Marshals Service silver dollar (reverse); 2021 National Law Enforcement gold & silver obverses
Earlier career
Editorial & book illustrator — Newsweek, New York Magazine, Hardy Boys / Nancy Drew covers — then portrait painter

Questions collectors ask

Did Frank Morris carve the coins he designed?

No. Morris is a designer in the U.S. Mint's Artistic Infusion Program — he draws the design, and a Mint sculptor-engraver builds the three-dimensional model the dies are made from. On the 2021 National Law Enforcement coins his designs were sculpted by Phebe Hemphill; on the 2015 U.S. Marshals silver dollar, by Joseph Menna.

What did he design on the 2015 U.S. Marshals Service silver dollar?

The reverse — a frontier U.S. Marshal leaning against a post and holding a 'WANTED IN FT. SMITH' poster. The obverse of that coin was designed by a different artist, Richard Masters.

What is the Artistic Infusion Program?

It's the U.S. Mint's pool of outside artists — illustrators, painters, sculptors, graphic designers — invited to submit coin and medal designs alongside the Mint's own staff. It exists to widen the range of styles on American coinage. Morris is one of its returning members.

How did a portrait painter end up designing coins?

Through a Mint open call for artists. Morris has said the work suits him because it joins his two loves, history and art, and rewards the deep research a portrait of a real person or event demands.

Was Frank Morris also an illustrator?

Yes — a prominent one. Before coins, he painted editorial covers for Newsweek and New York Magazine (including U.S. presidents), illustrated Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew books, and created the art for the first cover of Memphis magazine.

Sources