The painter the Mint went looking for
For most of its history, the United States Mint drew its coins in-house. A small team of staff engravers — career artists on the federal payroll — designed nearly everything in your pocket. That changed in 2003, when the Mint launched the Artistic Infusion Program (AIP): an effort to bring in outside artists, painters and illustrators and sculptors with no Mint connection, to freshen the look of American coins and medals.
Linda Fox is one of those outsiders. In May 2014 the Mint named her one of seven new AIP artists, and she joined the others for a two-day orientation at the Philadelphia Mint — the working heart of American coinage. The group brought the program's roster to nineteen artists.
She did not come from a coin background. Fox is a fine artist who works in oil and soft pastel in the tradition of realism — the patient, observed kind of painting that aims to render a face or a building as the eye actually sees it. Her commissioned work runs to portraits, still-life, architecture, even pets. She also works as a digital graphic artist in the standard professional tools — Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign. That combination — a trained portraitist who is also fluent in digital design — is exactly the profile the Mint's program was built to recruit.