Program to launch in 2009
Another popular design, which came in second place, featured three female Indians surrounded by squash, corn and beans. It represented the traditional Native "Three Sisters" system of planting the crops, which tend to supplement each other when grown in the same location.
In consultation with the National Museum of the American Indian and other Native groups, the Mint decided to focus on Indian agricultural achievements for the first year of its Native American $1 coin program, which will officially launch in 2009.
The winning choice has a good concept: an Indian woman tending her crops. This might be the first US coin ever with women on both sides. But the actual picture of the woman in profile is kind of bland. A figure on a novel's or comic book's cover would never be positioned so passively.
I'm not crazy about the second choice. The three women look too similar (perhaps they're supposed to be actual sisters, not symbolic sisters). They don't have strong Indian features, and the features they do have are somewhat indistinct. The woman with the flower in her hair says "Hawaiian" to me.
For more on the subject, see Native Agriculture on Dollar.
Writerfella here --
ReplyDeleteIn the case of the 1913 U.S. Buffalo 5 cent piece, the Native man's face depicted on the reverse was a combination of three Native men's faces by the artist James Earle Fraser. U.S. law states that no non-historical person's image may be depicted on currency. Thus it likely is that the women depicted for the Sacagawea dollar are combinations of several persons' faces...
All Best
Russ Bates
'writerfella'
Sacawagea was modeled on a real Native woman. Since this woman was used only as a likeness for Sacagawea, it didn't violate any law.
ReplyDeleteThis approach is better than inventing faces out of thin air. It's why the coin's obverse looks more realistic than the proposed reverse.
For more on the subject, see Shoshone Woman Modeled Sacagawea.
ReplyDeleteWriterfella here --
ReplyDeleteAnd the same articles say that the artist used other models before settling on her choice for Sacagawea. What did she do, burn her original sketches and have the other models scrubbed from her memory? Unlikely, and so there was a conglomerate image after all...
All Best
Russ Bates
'writerfella'
It's only your guess that artist Goodacre relied on her memory of previous models as well as the woman in front of her. Since you have no evidence for this silly speculation, it's a waste of time.
ReplyDeleteFact is, you misunderstood the law on depicting living people. If a coin depicts a dead person who was modeled on a living person, it's perfectly legal.
This is Randy'l, model for the Sacajawea Golden dollar. I dont often respond to blogs/comments found on-line although I felt I should set the story straight.
ReplyDeleteThe golden dollar is of my facial characteristics-the forehead,eyes, chin, cheekbones and mouth are all mine. The only fictional add-in was the pointy nose & chubby cheeks. From my knowledge of the 'other' models used by Glenna they just didnt have the look and thats because they werent Shoshone. All tribes have a distinguished look and Glenna not only noticed as she began the project but felt deep down that she needed to act on getting a Shoshone girl and fast. She did and here I am. The coin's image is of one person with the idea of creating what Sacajawea would have looked like at 15 years old. I think glenna did a fabulous job and am glad we won the contest.
Thank you.
Randy'L Teton