Jon Radel forwarded this announcement from the American Medallic Sculptors Association. Thanks.
-Editor
The American Medallic Sculptors Association (AMSA) has announced that Eugene Daub won the 2024 American Medal of the Year (AMY) award, for medals created in 2023, for his award medal commissioned by the American Numismatic Society (ANS). The American Numismatic Society confers the Huntington Award annually in honor of the late Archer M. Huntington, benefactor and President of the American Numismatic Society from 1905-1910, and commissioned this medal when stocks of the previous medal ran low.
Daub's Medal
In response to winning the AMY, Daub said,
"This award has raised my spirits. It's interesting that the Award is for an Award. In this case, honoring people who have done extraordinary work. This dovetails with much of the work I do, creating medals to honor extraordinary people.
"There is nothing in the world I would rather be doing than creating artwork for that purpose.
"I am grateful to Peter Van Alfen and the ANS Committee for giving me the opportunity to create this medal. It was a tough act to follow, replacing the Fuchs medal that was such a beautiful piece of medallic art.
"Originally, I thought I would be doing a Portrait of Huntington, but the committee wanted more of a symbolic piece. This forced me to dig deeper into an approach that symbolized Scholarship -- the book and the medal, my two favorite things -- and render their sculptural essence. Because of its simplicity, I feel it compliments whatever medallic images that it is paired with, as in the recent photo composition by Emma Pratte of the ANS Award to Dr. Pliego."
The medals were struck in silver at Medalcraft of Green Bay, WI and are 69 mm in diameter.
Meszaros' Medal
This year two medals tied for second place: "One Man's Terrorist is the Next Man's Freedom Fighter" by long-time AMSA member Michael Meszaros, and "Oak Leaves" by new member Tracy Mahaffey. These two medals truly demonstrate the breadth of subjects that medals can capture, from provocative political statements to intimate views of nature. Meszaros has twice won the AMY in the past, while this is Mahaffey's first entry.
Mahaffey's Medal
Meszaros' medal is in bronze and 99 mm in diameter. The artist says, "Both sides are the same, except for the inscriptions and the symbols on the shoulders of both shooter and victims. The effect on the victims is the same. Your view as to which is villain and which is hero depends on which side you support." The medal is available for $375, including shipping, from the artist at meszaros.sculptor@gmail.com.
Mahaffey is a professional stone carver from Rhode Island who specializes in headstones and memorials. "Oak Leaves" is her first bronze medal, uniface, and 4.5 in. in diameter. The artist says, "I love focusing on the mundane, these are the things that bring me relief from all the stress of the day - telephone poles, clothes pins, pinecones, these are all grounding for me."
All great medals!
-Editor
All AMY entries, by 24 artists, will be pictured in the next full color issue of AMSA's Members Exchange. Art medal collectors and designers are invited to learn about and join the American Medallic Sculpture Association at www.amsamedals.org. Previous year's winners may be viewed at https://amsamedals.org/eventsamerican_medal_of_the_year_award/.
Artists resident in the U.S., or members of AMSA, are invited to submit medals they create in 2024 to next year's competition. See AMSA's website, or contact Jon Radel, chair of the committee, at amy.admin@medal.museum, for details.
For more information on the American Medallic Sculpture Association, see:
https://amsamedals.org/
Wayne Homren, Editor
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