Do you have any personal connections to the subject matter?
“There wasn’t a particular theme – it was very open – there was some talk of ships or heraldry. My first thought was that the coin was using new technology so perhaps the design might reflect that.”
How did you approach the initial design concept?
“As the coin had an inner and outer circle, I came up with the simple idea of adding extra concentric circles which could then tell a story from the centre to the outside edge. My wife had recently introduced me to the work of the American thinker Alvin Toffler who argued that the history of the world could be divided into four sections: the pre-industrial, hand-made age, the machine age that began with the Industrial Revolution, the electronic age of constant power and energy and communication, and finally, the digital age. So, I tried to work on imagery and patterns that illustrated these stages.”
Did you undertake any research for the theme?
“I read books, visited libraries and borrowed some pieces of printed circuit board to draw from. One of the books I looked at was Spink’s Coins of England and the United Kingdom. Although my design seemed quite radical, I also wanted it to reflect older coins. My favourite coin as a child was the half-crown which I loved for its complex and decorative design. I also made the solder patterns from the electronic ring resemble the fluid shapes to be found on early English staters.”
Could you talk us through any iterations that led you to the final design?
“Remarkably, I made very few changes as I produced the design. As I was working in a pre-industrial, hand-made way (drawing and painting), I had no opportunity to cut, copy and paste! I was working, following the advice of the notes I received from the Mint, to the approximate size of a tea-plate (about 18cm diameter). What I found difficult to visualise was how it might look reduced down to roughly 2cm diameter.”
Were there any challenges you faced in creating the design?
“I was working from a position of not knowing the technicalities of coin production. I had produced some paintings and drawings in the past based on low-relief sculptures in architectural settings so I knew how to use angled light to suggest depth but most of the time I simply thought about the surface of a coin as having three layers; a middle layer, a lower incised layer and a raised layer.”