Who he was
Joel Iskowitz spent most of his life making art you have almost certainly held — and never noticed. Stamps you licked and stuck on envelopes. Coins that jingled in your pocket. By the time he died on April 23, 2026, at 79, he had designed more coins and medals adopted by the United States Mint than any artist in its history. Most Americans never learned his name.
He was born in the Bronx on August 15, 1946. He went to New York's High School of Music and Art, spent a scholarship summer at Yale, and earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from Hunter College in 1968. At Hunter he learned to cut metal — etching and engraving under the printmaker Richard Claude Ziemann, whom he later apprenticed with. That early training in the slow, exacting craft of incising a line into a plate would echo decades later in how he thought about coins.
The career took a while to find its shape. He taught math and art as a substitute teacher in New York City schools through the 1970s. He worked a year as a portrait artist in San Francisco. He drew album covers and illustrated paperback novels. Then, in 1977, came his first stamp commission — an endangered-species series for Sierra Leone, sponsored by the World Wildlife Fund. That opened the floodgates: more than 2,000 stamps for 40 nations over the following decades, including commemoratives of the British Royal Family.
Stamps taught him a discipline that would define his coins. As he once put it, a stamp design "must be super accurate and well documented, for if you get so much as an animal's tuft of fur out of place on a philatelic design you will hear from someone critical of your design." Accuracy was not a chore. It was the whole point.