Designer

Renata Gordon

The Philadelphia sculptor who turned a painter's eye into the coins in your pocket

She has been making art since she was a year and a half old — she says she doesn't remember a time before it. Today Renata Gordon is one of a tiny handful of sculptors employed inside the United States Mint, and her hands have shaped everything from a bluegrass banjo on a dollar to the new eagle on America's gold coin.

A life in clay and paint

Most people who design a U.S. coin never set foot in the Mint. They mail in a drawing and hope. Renata Gordon is one of the few who works inside the building, every day, turning ideas into the metal you can hold.

She grew up in New Jersey and, by her own account, was an artist before she could really talk. "I've been creating artwork since age one and a half," she told the National Endowment for the Arts in 2019. "I don't remember not being an artist." She studied sculpture at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, earning her fine-arts degree in December 2010.

Then came the door that changed her life: an internship at the United States Mint in Philadelphia. She started in March 2011, and the experience landed hard. "When I interned at the Mint, I realized that I was working with some of the best in the world," she said. She stayed — and became one of the Mint's in-house sculptor-engravers, the small team of medallic artists who model the coins and medals the country issues.

It is a strange and old-fashioned job in a digital age. A medallic artist — someone who designs and sculpts the art on coins and medals — has to think in extreme low relief, the shallow raised surface a coin can carry without jamming a stamping press. Gordon does the work that turns a flat drawing into a three-dimensional model the Mint can cut into a die, the hardened steel stamp that strikes the design into a coin blank. Get the relief wrong and the coin won't strike cleanly. Get it right and a banjo seems to lean into the music.

A painter's eye, in metal

What sets Gordon apart is where she comes from. She is not only a sculptor — she is a painter and illustrator, and she says the two feed each other. While at the Mint she wrote a children's book of poems and illustrated it herself; that side work, she says, "feeds my work at the Mint."

Her process starts not with the chisel but with the eye. "I just look at the image hard," she said of how she approaches a new design. "I really look at it with a discerning eye." That patience shows in the texture of her coins — the flowing water she sculpted into the 2017 Ozark National Scenic Riverways quarter, the tilt of a banjo on the Kentucky dollar that seems to carry rhythm.

She is also clear-eyed about what the work is. The Mint is a factory that makes billions of coins, but Gordon refuses to think of her part as industrial. "If I could only say one thing about the work I do here at the Mint," she said, "I would say to remember that it's in the realm of fine art."

A note on the credits, because they matter to collectors. On most modern U.S. coins, two names appear: a designer who drew it and a sculptor who modeled it for striking. Many of Gordon's best-known coins are ones she sculpted from another artist's drawing — often a drawing by an outside artist in the Mint's Artistic Infusion Program, the pool of freelance artists the Mint commissions designs from. That is not a lesser role. The sculptor decides how the image lives in metal, and it is her initials — RG — that ride alongside the designer's on the coin.

Key facts

Born
New Jersey, United States (year not publicly documented)
Nationality
American
Education
BFA in sculpture, University of the Arts, Philadelphia (December 2010)
At the U.S. Mint
Joined March 2011; sculptor-engraver / medallic artist, Philadelphia
Also works as
Painter, muralist, and children's-book illustrator
Signature works
American Innovation dollars (Connecticut, Kentucky, Illinois); Lady Bird Johnson First Spouse gold reverse (2015); American Gold Eagle Type 2 reverse (2021); Ozark Riverways quarter (2017)

A career in coins and medals

  1. 2010Earns her BFA in sculpture from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia.
  2. 2011Joins the United States Mint in Philadelphia as an intern in March, then becomes a staff sculptor-engraver.
  3. 2015Sculpts the reverse of the Lady Bird Johnson First Spouse $10 gold coin, from a design by Chris Costello.
  4. 2017Sculpts the Ozark National Scenic Riverways quarter in the America the Beautiful series — one of her favorite projects.
  5. 2018Sculpts the common reverse of the Breast Cancer Awareness commemorative coins.
  6. 2019Sculpts the common obverse of the American Legion 100th Anniversary half dollar.
  7. 2020Sculpts the Connecticut 'Gerber Variable Scale' American Innovation dollar (designed by Richard Masters), plus the End of World War II 75th Anniversary coin and medal and the Mayflower silver medal.
  8. 2021Sculpts the new American Gold Eagle reverse — the 'Type 2' eagle portrait — from a design by Jennie Norris.
  9. 2022Sculpts the Kentucky 'Bluegrass' American Innovation dollar (the tilted banjo), designed by Christina Hess; also sculpts the Illinois 'steel plow' dollar, designed by Beth Zaiken.

In her words

"If I could only say one thing about the work I do here at the Mint, I would say to remember that it's in the realm of fine art."

— Renata Gordon, First Person interview, National Endowment for the Arts, 2019

Questions collectors ask

Which American Innovation dollars did Renata Gordon work on?

She sculpted several. The best-documented are the 2020 Connecticut 'Gerber Variable Scale' dollar (designed by Richard Masters), the 2022 Kentucky 'Bluegrass' dollar with the tilted banjo (designed by Christina Hess), and the 2022 Illinois 'steel plow' dollar (designed by Beth Zaiken). On all three, she's the sculptor who turned another artist's drawing into the model used to strike the coin.

Did she design the Lady Bird Johnson gold coin?

She sculpted the reverse, but didn't design it. The 2015 Lady Bird Johnson First Spouse $10 gold coin reverse was designed by Artistic Infusion Program artist Chris Costello and sculpted by Renata Gordon. It shows the Jefferson Memorial, the Washington Monument and flowers, a nod to Mrs. Johnson's campaign to beautify and conserve America. The coins were 24-karat gold, half an ounce, struck at West Point.

What's the difference between designing a coin and sculpting it?

On a modern U.S. coin, the designer draws the artwork and the sculptor models it in three dimensions for the striking press, deciding how the image reads in shallow relief. Both names appear on the coin. Much of Gordon's work is sculpting designs by others — often freelance artists in the Mint's Artistic Infusion Program — and that's her initials, RG, on the finished coin beside the designer's.

Did she really sculpt the new Gold Eagle?

Yes — the reverse. When the American Gold Eagle's reverse was redesigned in 2021 (collectors call it the 'Type 2' eagle), the new close-up eagle head was designed by Jennie Norris and sculpted by Renata Gordon. The change splits 2021 Gold Eagles into two collectible types, which is why that year is closely watched.

Sources

Renata Gordon — U.S. Mint Medallic Artist | colcur