Title
Help Login Artist Initials
Purpose

This page is intended to provide you with quick links to pages that organize medals by certain criteria, for example by the people that are shown on them or the organizations that issued them. Bold entries lead to sub-indices that help organize the index into a more useful hierarchy; Italicized entries represent aliases for other index entries.

Keyboard Navigation

As on all pages you can use SPACE to scroll down and Shift-SPACE to scroll up. Up and down arrows also work. In addition, you can use a single letter to scroll to the glossary section of terms starting with that letter.

Home Artists Series & Collections Glossary & Index Contact

Robert Stoll

MedalsVisual
Eagle Engraving and Stamping Medal
1894-96
by Victor David Brenner
Pin It...Create Flipcard...Contact Me...
Description

The medal's obverse bears nobleman standing in front of array of flags and bladed weapons, skimpy eagle with spread wings at his feet. Around, COMPLIMENTS OF EAGLE ENGRAVING & STAMPING CO. / OFFICE ROBT. STOLL - 18 JOHN ST. NEW YORK; signed around bottom, D. BRENNER - FECIT N.Y.

The reverse bears legend: MANUFACTURERS / COINS, / MEDALS, / BADGES ETC. / ALL KINDS OF STAMPING IN / GOLD, SILVER, BRONZE, BRASS, ETC. / IN GENERAL FOR THE TRADE / PRESS & DROP HAMMER WORK / A SPECIALTY / 92 FULTON ST & / 132 WILLIAM ST. / NEW YORK / ESTIMATES FURNISHED WITH OR WITHOUT DIES.

Victor David Brenner was at the very beginning of his career when he made this medal while he was working for Robert Stoll. It was used as a store card to show off some of the services that Stoll could provide.

The circular medal measures 44.7mm in diameter and was struck in white metal by Robert Stoll. No mintage is reported.  It is referenced in Smedley's catalogue as #6.

Medal Details

This section contains a table of detailed medal information. Currently, I am not aware of any variants of this medal. Please notify me if you come across any or if you find incorrect or missing information.

materialWhite metal
edge6
diameter44.7mm
weight8.2g
mintageunknown
Last modified: Oct 26, 2017 16:13
Photographers Association of America Medal
1897
by Victor David Brenner
Pin It...Create Flipcard...Contact Me...
Description

This uniface medal's obverse bears standing Columbia holding laurel branch in left hand, magnifying glass in right; Sun's rays emerging enhanced through magnifier; to left, winding banner reading LIGHT / UNITES / SCIENCE / & / ART; to right, artist's palette and chemical vessel; below, likeness of Louis Daguerre. Around, PHOTOGRAPHERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA; to right of figure, 1897; below, to left and right of Daguerre, LOUIS - DAGUERRE; at end of winding banner, crudely incused, R.STOLL NY.; below, in tiny letters, .D.BRENNER NY.

The otherwise blank reverse bears issuer's mark ROBERT STOLL / N.Y. / 19 JOHN ST.

The medal celebrates the father of photography, Louis Daguerre, as well as photography itself as a union of science and art. Louis Daguerre, building on work by countryman Joseph-Nicéphore Niépce had developed a process that allowed the relatively reliable and inexpensive creation of "daguerrotypes". In 1839 the French government awarded pensions to both Daguerre and Niépce's son and they published the process to make it available almost free of restrictions. Thus, the field of photography was born.

By 1897 the old Daguerrotype had already been defeated by newer, less expensive technologies. The 1850's saw the arrival of inexpensive ambrotypes, quick tintypes, and paper prints from glass negatives. In the late 1860's, inventors Louis Ducos du Hauron and Charles Cros unveiled their nearly identical ideas for making full-color prints on paper. Yet the field was still young and certainly not easily accessible to the wider public. In the late 19th century, photography was still a developing field, both artistically and in terms of science and engineering, and the medal acknowledges this perfectly.

This medal is somewhat crowded but nevertheless attractive due to its heavy ornamentation and whimsical lettering. In 1897 Victor David Brenner worked as a die cutter for the New York seal and die maker, Robert Stoll. Under Stoll's employment, he produced dozens of medals, including the Society of Cincinnati Medal, the Church of the Most Holy Redeemer Jubilee Medal, a Beethoven Medal, and at least six athletic, award medals.

The medal measures 54mm in diameter and was struck in bronze by Robert Stoll of New York.

Medal Details

This section contains a table of detailed medal information. Currently, I am not aware of any variants of this medal. Please notify me if you come across any or if you find incorrect or missing information.

materialBronze
edge6
diameter54mm
mintageunknown
Last modified: Oct 26, 2017 16:46
Copyright © 2014 - 2025 by medallicartcollector.com, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.