Great Pyramid Calendar Medal
by Jurek Jakowicz
Calendar medals have a long tradition going back to the 17th
century. The idea for a durable object that could be carried around
easily and would provide a calendar for quick reference was developed
more or less simultaneously in several different countries.
Depending
on the size of the medal and the design, a calendar medal usually held six months
or the entire year in a format that would allow a quick lookup of the
day of the week for a given date. Additionally, the major Christian holidays were
frequently listed as abbreviated dates. Early calendar medals often just showed the
dates of the year's Sundays, those days being important for religious observations and also
sufficient to quickly calculate all the other days.
Over the centuries calendar medals slowly lost their utility but the idea stayed alive and
they were reinvented as collectible objects. When calendar medals only had the calendar on them,
they were certainly collectible, but really only by specialists. By combining an appealing design
on one side with a calendar panel on the other, the appearance of utility
was maintained while creating a medallic object that also appealed to a larger audience.
Some cultures had a greater and more lasting affinity to calendar medals than others. Austrians seemed to
like calendar medals throughout the first half of the 20th century. The Austrian calendar medals from that time can be quite
beautiful and are very collectible. French mints have created calendar art medals throughout the years and there are some
truly spectacular modern designs available. As far as I can tell, American mints got back into the
calendar art medal business in the 1970s and stopped making them in the 2000s.
Sailing Ships Tall and True Calendar Medal
by Marcel Jovine
The Medallic Art Company started issuing calendar medals in 1975,
with a medal by
Frank Eliscu that had
"Natural Life" as its theme. When the decision on
the subject for 1976 had to be made, there was very little doubt about what it would be: 1976 was the
year of the American Bicentennial celebrations. Needless to say that the following two calendar medal issues were
patriotically themed.
Marcel Jovine was the artists who dominated
the field of Medallic Art Company calendar medals for many years. He designed fourteen of MACo's first sixteen issues.
Jovine once said:
"I liked doing the yearly calendar medal. I could count on receiving this commission. I had a whole year to think about
the theme of the next year’s medal."
Natural Life Calendar Medal
by Edward Ryneal Grove
I don't know why the Medallic Art Company chose to interrupt his run by muling a
Society of Medalists medal's obverse
by
Edward R. Grove with a calendar reverse for a second calendar medal dated 1983!
Maybe the sculptor and the company could not agree on terms and the company demonstrated that they
were willing to go with a different sculptor?
While calendar medals have traditionally had themes related to time or astrology, the Medallic Art Company
liked to set a multi-year theme, sometimes executed by one
artist. One such theme was the "Animal Life," designed and sculpted by Don Everhart II, which spanned the
years from 1993 to 1997. Another was "The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World" which ran from 1998
to 2004 and employed different artists throughout the series.
Marcel Jovine did not create a thematical series but he certainly created a series in terms
of stylistic cohesion.
Most of his calendar medals bear a segemented or rotational design that shows scenes or details
arranged around the medal's rim.
In addition to the annual calendar medals, the Medallic Art Company
also created proprietary calendar medals for corporate customers. It can be a bit
confusing for a new collector to see multiple calendar medals from one maker
for the same year. Usually, only one of them will be the "annual calendar medal" and all
others are proprietary issues that were created for a specific customer. You are of course free to treat all of them as
generic calendar medals and collect them together.
Zodiac Calendar Medal
by Marcel Jovine
In gold-plated bronze
As with most of MACo's medals, different calendar medal variants were available for purchase.
With a few exceptions, all of MACo's calendar medals are roughly 3 inches (76mm) in diameter and were struck in bronze. A couple
of issues also have larger diameter medallions that were struck in limited editions. For some
of the early years I know of gold-plated bronze variants. I assume that the pure silver variant was offered in
all years but I can't be certain. While bronze pieces come up with nice regularity, the silver and
gold-plated variants appear to be pretty rare. I almost never see them on eBay and only rarely at
auctions. It probably has to do with how expensive they were: the silver variants in the late '90s
and early '00s retailed for between $169 and $189!
While I still find the later MACo calendar medals very appealing, they lack some of the subtlety of
the earlier issues, they seem to be "blunter," for lack of a better word. I don't know whether
it is just the difference in sculptors or whether the
advent of digital design tools has something to do with it.
Till its demise in 2018, the Medallic Art Company offered a range of stock calendar medal obverses
that could be combined with a calendar on the reverse. I fear that the days of
artistic annual calendar medals are largely over for now. Maybe we will see a renaissance
when companies flush with cash are looking to support artists and do "something new and exciting"
for their brand, thereby causing a calendar medal revival (I'm not getting my hopes up too much).
Franklin Mint Calendar Medal
by Gilroy Roberts
The Franklin Mint started issuing calendar medals in the sixties, a good decade before
the Medallic Art Company decided to compete in that segment of the medallic market. The
first calendar medals all bore the portrait of Benjamin Franklin and are therefore somewhat
different in character from later, annually unique issues. The Franklin portrait was designed by
Gilroy Roberts, the former U.S. Mint
engraver and, starting in 1965, Chief Engraver and Chairman of the Board of the Franklin Mint.
Tree of Time Medal
by Clayton Blaker
The real unique art calendar medal series appears to have begun in 1973. Most of the Franklin Mint
calendar medals followed a theme of
"time" that they explored in different ways.
Two issues (1974 and '75) did it
through a traditional zodiac medal that focused on the passing of the year itself, another (1981)
through a story like the old
"Rip van Winkle" tale, yet another through the depiction of
evolution or ageing (1977).
Ernest Lauser and Don Everhart II
were two artists who were called upon multiple times.
For some of the medals I know neither designer nor sculptor. While Franklin Mint's
earlier calendar medals often listed the designers and sculptors who had contributed to the medal
in the accompanying leaflet, that was not the case for later medals. Also, I am missing
leaflets for several of the later medals, so while the information might be available in general,
I am not aware of it. Any assistance with completing the medal records would be appreciated.
U.S Constitution Bicentennial Calendar Medal
The Medalcraft Mint can be regarded as the successor to the Medallic Art Company because they
purchased a lot of bankrupt MACo's dies in 2018. Independent of that transaction they issued calendar
medals as early as 1987 (at least that's the first one that I know of). I have not been able to
find a thematic thread that runs through Medalcraft's calendar medals but that might be due to the
small number of issues that I have encountered so far. The ones that I have seen seem to take their
thematic cues from year-specific events like centennials or turn to time-related themes like the seasons.
I really know very little about the series. Any assistance with completing the medal records would be appreciated.
Just recently I stumbled accross calendar medals struck by the Hoffman Mint. I don't know whether
I had always missed them before or whether they don't show up very frequently because they are rare. I
am attempting to find out more about these medals. At least in the 1990s the medals seemed to be largely
animal-centric, with particular focus on wildlife.
Collecting Calendar Medals
For the collector, Calendar medals are attractive for many reasons:
- Many of the medals are appealing and decorative.
- In general, the medals are in the affordable $15 to $50 range with only a few
reaching up into the $80 to $150 range. Once you get into the silver
variants they start getting expensive.
If you are savvy and take your time, you can definitely build a reasonably complete
collection (not including variants) for very little money.
- Most calendar medals are not rare at all so it won't take you long to get a nice
collection going.
- Investment-wise I'm not convinced that they are the best option but if you're
smart you will not spend too much on your purchases and you'll probably always be
able to find a buyer without losing money.
- With this website you now have a guide for the different medals. I was a bit
overwhelmed by the different makers and general vs. corporate issues.