The artist designed these coins and medals, which were sculpted by another medallic artist.
Joseph Menna became the 14th Chief Engraver of the United States Mint in February 2019. Menna joined the Mint in 2005, and has over three decades of professional experience and classical training. He was the first full-time artist possessing both digital and traditional skillsets hired by the U.S. Mint and was the first medallic artist in U.S. Mint history. In this position he created the world’s first digitally sculpted coin, the 2007 James Monroe Presidential Dollar Obverse. He also created the first digitally drawn designs ever done at the Mint and introduced the digital 2-D design workflow that is employed by Mint artists to this day.
Prior to joining the Mint, Menna worked as a sculptor and instructor at a Princeton, NJ area fine art foundry. There he sculpted many life-sized figures and worked digitally on projects for a variety of prominent New York City gallery artists. Concurrently, he pursued his own sculpting and fine art drawing, creating many works including those for gallery exhibitions and monumental sculptures.
His work has won multiple Coin of the Year awards in various categories. In addition to his work at the Mint, he maintains an active freelance career in entertainment industry collectibles and the fine arts. He is globally recognized as one of the world’s leading practitioners of digital sculpture. He created the collectibles industry’s first ever digitally produced independent collectible statue, and has done a variety of demonstrations at world class venues such as the San Diego and New York Comic Cons and the ZBrush Summit. He also sculpted the digital concept model for the largest sculpture in world history, The Statue of Unity in Gujarat, India, standing at 597-feet tall. His fine art drawings have also been exhibited in galleries in Philadelphia and New York City.
Menna holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in sculpture from the University of the Arts, a Master of Fine Arts degree in sculpture from the New York Academy of Art, with post- graduate study at the Saint Petersburg Stieglitz State Academy of Art and Design in St. Petersburg, Russia. His additional professional education includes studies at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art, the Sculpture Center, and the Art Students League. He spent most of these years of study under the tutelage of New York sculptor Leonid Lerman, who Menna credits as his primary inspiration and lifelong mentor.
The artist designed these coins and medals, which were sculpted by another medallic artist.
The artist sculpted these coins and medals based on his own design.
The artist sculpted these coins and medals based on another artist's design.