Designer

Thomas Cleveland

The Oklahoma illustrator the U.S. Mint pulled in from the outside — and who drew its eagle of FREEDOM.

In 2004 the U.S. Mint did something it almost never does: it went looking for artists who had never touched a coin. Thomas S. Cleveland, an ad-and-illustration man from Oklahoma, was one of roughly a dozen picked from about 250 applicants — and within three years his eagle was on a platinum coin in the national series.

The outsider the Mint went looking for

For most of its history, the U.S. Mint drew its coins from the inside. A small bench of staff sculptor-engravers cut the dies, and the same hands shaped design after design. Then, in 2003, the Mint tried something different. It opened a call for outside artists — illustrators, painters, designers with no coin experience at all — and asked them to bring fresh eyes to the most circulated art in America. The program was called the Artistic Infusion Program, and it would change who got to design a U.S. coin.

Thomas S. Cleveland answered that call. Born in Oklahoma on June 8, 1960, he had built a working life in commercial art — advertising, illustration, design — the kind of craft that has to sell an idea in a single glance. In 2004 he was one of roughly a dozen designers chosen from about 250 applicants. He stayed for a decade, until 2014, and by the end was one of only three original Master Designers still in the program.

He was, in other words, exactly the kind of artist the old Mint would never have hired — and precisely the kind the new program was built to find.

The craft: an illustrator's eye on a tiny canvas

A coin is a brutal place to make a picture. The whole composition lives inside a disc smaller than a postage stamp, struck in relief — raised metal, not ink — and it has to read at arm's length and survive a magnifying glass at the same time. Cleveland came to it from illustration, where the job is to compress meaning into one clear image, and that instinct shows in his work: a single legible subject, doing one thing, with the symbolism packed tight around it.

His best-known design is the reverse — the "tails" side — of the 2007 American Platinum Eagle. He drew a bald eagle with its wings spread wide for freedom and a federal shield held at the ready, with the single word FREEDOM across it. It was the Executive Branch entry in a three-year platinum series titled "The Foundations of American Democracy." Cleveland supplied the design; a Mint medallic sculptor cut it into the die — the standard division of labor in the program, where an outside artist's drawing becomes a staff sculptor's relief.

That split is worth knowing, because it explains a phrase you'll see again and again on his coins: designed by Thomas Cleveland, sculpted by someone else. The idea is his; the metal is a collaboration.

Key facts

Full name
Thomas S. Cleveland
Born
June 8, 1960 — Oklahoma, USA
Nationality
American
Training
Advertising, illustration & design (fine-art painting minor), East Texas State University (now Texas A&M University–Commerce)
U.S. Mint role
Artistic Infusion Program Master Designer, 2004–2014
Best known for
Reverse of the 2007 American Platinum Eagle ('FREEDOM')
Design credits
15 U.S. coins and medals
First Spouse gold coins
Abigail Adams (2007, reverse), Van Buren's Liberty (2008, reverse), Anna Harrison (2009, reverse), Florence Harding (2014, obverse & reverse)

Four First Ladies on gold

Cleveland's longest run of coin work was the First Spouse gold series — half-ounce, 24-karat gold coins, authorized under the Presidential $1 Coin Act of 2005, that for the first time put American First Ladies on a consecutive run of U.S. coins. He is credited on four of them, and each one had to tell a life in a single picture.

For Abigail Adams (2007) he drew her as a young woman writing to her husband John while he sat in the Continental Congress — and put her own famous plea, "Remember the Ladies," on the coin. For Anna Harrison (2009) he showed her doing what she loved, teaching students. For Florence Harding (2014) — where he designed both sides — the reverse is a small puzzle of symbols: a ballot box, a camera, a torch, a pen. They mark her as the first First Lady to cast a vote for a presidential candidate, the campaign photo-ops she staged, and her correspondence with World War I veterans.

The fourth is the odd one out, and the most interesting. The Mint had a problem: what do you do when a president had no living First Lady? For those terms it substituted a Liberty — the allegorical woman from the coinage of that president's own era. Cleveland's reverse for the 2008 Van Buren's Liberty coin is one of those stand-ins: not a portrait of a real woman, but the idea of one, borrowed from the money of Van Buren's day.

Where you'll find him now

Cleveland's decade in the program produced 15 design credits across coins and medals — among them work on Sacagawea Native American dollars and a Vicksburg "America the Beautiful" quarter reverse — a substantial body of work for an artist who started as an outsider. After leaving the program in 2014, he kept his connection to collectors alive in an unusual way: in January 2017 he signed an exclusive deal with the grading service PCGS to hand-sign his autograph, in silver ink, onto certified examples of coins he had designed — beginning with that 2007 Platinum Eagle reverse.

It's a fitting coda for an illustrator. The signature collectors chase on a Cleveland coin is, finally, the same hand that drew it.

Questions collectors ask

What is Thomas Cleveland most famous for designing?

The reverse of the 2007 American Platinum Eagle — a bald eagle with wings spread and a federal shield, inscribed FREEDOM. It was the Executive Branch design in the Mint's three-year platinum series 'The Foundations of American Democracy.'

How did Thomas Cleveland become a U.S. Mint designer?

He applied to the Mint's Artistic Infusion Program in 2003 — a program created to bring outside artists into U.S. coin design — and in 2004 was chosen as one of roughly a dozen designers from about 250 applicants. He served as a Master Designer until 2014.

Which First Spouse gold coins did Thomas Cleveland design?

He is credited on four: the reverses of Abigail Adams (2007), Van Buren's Liberty (2008) and Anna Harrison (2009), plus both the obverse and reverse of Florence Harding (2014).

Why does a Cleveland coin say 'designed by' him but 'sculpted by' someone else?

In the Artistic Infusion Program, an outside artist creates the design and a U.S. Mint staff sculptor-engraver renders it into the steel die. So Cleveland supplied the drawing while a Mint medallic sculptor cut the relief — both names appear in the coin's credits.

What does Thomas Cleveland's autograph on a slabbed coin mean?

In January 2017 Cleveland signed an exclusive deal with the grading service PCGS to personally autograph certified examples of coins he designed, in silver ink. The signature is a collector premium tied to the designer, not a Mint marking.

Sources