John Mercanti

John M. Mercanti

John M. Mercanti, twelfth Chief Engraver of the U.S. Mint.
Born April 27, 1943 (1943-04-27) (age 68)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Nationality American
Field Sculpture
Engraving
Training Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia College of Art, Fleisher Art Memorial School

John M. Mercanti (born April 27, 1943)[1] is an American sculptor and engraver. He was the twelfth Chief Engraver of the United States Mint until his retirement in late 2010.

Biography

Mercanti was born in Philadelphia. There, he attended the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the Philadelphia College of Art and the Fleisher Art Memorial School. He also served in the Pennsylvania Army National Guard for six years.[2]

In 1974, Mercanti joined the United States Mint as a sculptor-engraver after working as an illustrator.[3] On May 19, 2006, he was appointed Chief Engraver of the U.S. Mint (also known as Supervisor of Design and Master Tooling Development Specialist).[4] The position had been officially vacant for 15 years following the retirement of Elizabeth Jones, the Mint's eleventh Chief Engraver, in 1991.

In June 2011, Mercanti became a paid spokesperson for Goldline International and appeared in a television commercial for the company.[5]

Work

Mercanti has produced more coin and medal designs than any employee in United States Mint history (more than 100 as of 2006).[4] Among these are the 1984 Olympic gold ten-dollar coin, the 1986 Statue of Liberty dollar coin, the 1989 Congress Bicentennial gold five-dollar coin, the obverse of the 1990 Eisenhower Centennial silver dollar, the obverse of the 1991 Mount Rushmore five-dollar coin, and the obverse of the 1991 Korean War Memorial silver dollar.[2] In addition to designing and sculpting a number of Congressional Gold Medals, Mercanti worked on quarters for the states of Arkansas, Iowa, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia for the 50 State Quarters Program.

References