Who she is
For most of her career, Laurie Musser's art arrived in the mail. She spent more than twenty years as an illustrator at American Greetings — one of the country's big "social expression" companies, the kind that makes the cards people buy for birthdays and holidays. It is steady, anonymous work. Millions of people held her drawings without ever knowing her name.
Then she struck out on her own. In 2019 she founded Chalkboard Studio in Strongsville, Ohio, taking on surface patterns, portraits, and commercial design under her own banner. That same year, a very different client signed her up: the United States Mint.
In July 2019 the Mint admitted Musser to its Artistic Infusion Program — a roster of outside artists the Mint draws on to design coins and medals. AIP designers don't carve the metal themselves. They create the artwork; a Mint sculptor-engraver then translates it into the three-dimensional relief that gets struck into a coin. A few years after leaving the greeting-card business, Musser's drawings were ending up not on paper, but on gold.