Who he is
LeRoy Transfield was born in New Zealand, of Maori and European descent. He grew up across New Zealand, Australia, and Singapore — and from very early on, by his own account, he was drawn to war and the stories of the men who fought. "Ever since I was very little I was fascinated by war and war stories," he has said.
That fascination was not abstract. His great-uncle, Huriwhenua Taiaroa, served in the First World War with the Maori contingent of the New Zealand Expeditionary Force. So when the United States Mint opened a competition to design a coin marking the centennial of America's entry into that same war, Transfield was not designing for strangers. He was designing for his own blood.
He took a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Brigham Young University–Hawaii in 1993, studying sculpture under the artist Jan Fisher. He went on to teach, then opened his own studio. Today he lives and works in Orem, Utah, where most of his work is figurative — people sculpted in the round, in bronze and stone, including war memorials for Utah towns.