Designer

George Klauba: the sailor who painted a coin's worth of memory

A self-taught Chicago artist carried his Navy years onto a half dollar that honored a war he'd grown up in the shadow of.

Most coin designers spend their careers inside the Mint. George Klauba never did. He was a Chicago painter and a former Navy gunner's mate whose surreal, sea-soaked canvases caught the government's eye — and in 1993 the United States struck a half dollar from one of his designs.

Who he was

George Klauba was born in 1938 on Chicago's southwest side, the son of Lithuanian immigrants. His father was a machinist who moonlighted as a stage magician. His mother walked him through the Art Institute of Chicago and the Field Museum — the rooms that, by his own telling, set the course of his life.

In 1956, just shy of eighteen, he enlisted in the Navy. He served three years aboard the destroyer USS Kenneth D. Bailey, sailing with the Atlantic Fleet into the Mediterranean and to Cuba as a gunner's mate. Those years at sea never left his work. Decades later he would paint Melville's Moby-Dick and the naval battles of the Pacific, again and again, like a man returning to a port he couldn't quite leave.

After the Navy he studied commercial art at Chicago's American Academy of Art and spent years as a graphic artist — including a long run at the Chicago Sun-Times. But the work that mattered to him was the fine art he made on his own, self-taught: dreamlike, meticulous, often nautical paintings and carved-and-painted wooden constructions. That blend of discipline and strangeness is what eventually put his hand on a coin.

The craft — and the coin

Klauba is not a Mint engraver. He's an outsider to numismatics — and that's exactly why his one coin is interesting. The U.S. Mint reached past its own staff for the 1991–1995 World War II 50th Anniversary commemorative, and Klauba's design won the obverse of the half dollar. (The obverse is the "heads" side of a coin.) For an artist whose imagination ran on warships and the sea, it was a near-perfect commission.

His obverse packs the whole war onto one small face of metal: three U.S. service members — a soldier, a sailor, and an airman — looking up and to the left, set against a "V" for victory, with a B-17 bomber and five stars riding above them. It reads as memory rather than reportage, more dream than diorama — recognizably the work of the painter, not a heraldic committee. A Mint sculptor-engraver translated his drawing into the low relief a coin requires (catalogs credit T. James Ferrell with modeling the obverse); the design is Klauba's.

The fit wasn't an accident. Just three years before the coin, Klauba had won the Pauline Palmer Prize at the 1990 Chicago show for a painted wood carving steeped in World War II naval imagery — the same well he'd drawn from since his own service. The Mint, in effect, found an artist who had already spent decades rehearsing this subject.

Key facts

Born
1938, Chicago, Illinois
Nationality
American
Training
American Academy of Art, Chicago; self-taught as a fine artist
Military service
U.S. Navy, 1956–1959, aboard USS Kenneth D. Bailey
Coin design
Obverse, World War II 50th Anniversary half dollar (1991–1995, struck 1993)
Notable honor
Pauline Palmer Prize, 1990 Chicago show
Collections
Illinois State Museum; New Bedford Whaling Museum; Rockford Art Museum; Vermillion County War Museum

Career timeline

  1. 1938Born in Chicago to Lithuanian immigrant parents.
  2. 1956–1959Serves in the U.S. Navy aboard the destroyer USS Kenneth D. Bailey, deploying to the Mediterranean and Cuba.
  3. 1990Wins the Pauline Palmer Prize at the Chicago show for a painted wood carving with World War II naval motifs.
  4. 1991–1993His design is chosen for the obverse of the World War II 50th Anniversary commemorative half dollar; the coin is released May 28, 1993.
  5. 2016Exhibits paintings recalling the Cuban Revolution he glimpsed as a young sailor; his longtime Ann Nathan Gallery closes.

Questions about George Klauba

Who designed the World War II 50th Anniversary half dollar?

George Klauba, a Chicago painter and Navy veteran, designed the obverse (heads side). Bill J. Leftwich designed the reverse. The coin carries the dual date 1991–1995 and was struck in 1993.

Was George Klauba a U.S. Mint engraver?

No. Klauba was an independent fine artist, not a Mint staff sculptor-engraver. The Mint selected his outside design for the half dollar obverse, and a Mint sculptor-engraver modeled it into coin relief — catalogs credit T. James Ferrell with the modeling.

What does the half dollar's obverse show?

Three U.S. service members — a soldier, a sailor, and an airman — looking up and to the left, set against a 'V' for victory, with a B-17 bomber and five stars above them.

Why was a Chicago painter chosen for a war coin?

Klauba served in the Navy from 1956 to 1959 and built much of his art career on nautical and World War II themes. In 1990 he won the Pauline Palmer Prize for a wood carving full of WWII naval imagery — so the subject was already deeply his.

What else is George Klauba known for?

His surreal, sea-themed paintings and carved wooden constructions, including a long-running series on Melville's Moby-Dick. His work is held by the Illinois State Museum and other regional museums.

Sources