When we think about American art history, museums and galleries usually come to mind. Portraits. Landscapes. Monumental historical paintings. Yet one of the most overlooked forms of American visual art appears not on canvas, but on official documents, flags, and government buildings:
state seals.
State seals occupy a unique space between fine art and civic design. Created by engravers, painters, and heraldic artists between the 1770s and early 1900s, these symbols were never meant to hang in galleries. They were designed to communicate authority, identity, and shared values through visual language—a form of applied art that has shaped American civic culture for nearly two and a half centuries.
Art Beyond the Gallery Wall
From an artistic standpoint, state seals follow many of the same principles found in classical art. Allegory, balance, symbolism, composition—all play central roles. Figures representing Liberty, Justice, Agriculture, or Industry appear repeatedly. These echo traditions rooted in European heraldry and Enlightenment-era iconography.
But seals had a functional purpose that paintings didn't. They authenticated laws, treaties, official correspondence. This dual role required artists to blend aesthetics with clarity and symbolism. The challenge was considerable: create an image that could be reproduced at various scales, remain legible when pressed into wax or embossed on paper, and convey complex ideas through simplified visual elements.
No room for error. No room for ambiguity.
Paul Revere: Engraver as Civic Artist
Paul Revere is widely remembered for his midnight ride in 1775. But first and foremost, he was a professional silversmith and engraver. His workshop on Fish Street in Boston's North End produced decorative silver, yes, but also copperplate engravings for official seals, bookplates, and currency used by colonial and early state governments.
Revere's artistic training in the rococo style influenced his approach to civic design. His work on the Massachusetts state seal, adopted in various forms throughout the late 18th century, demonstrates the technical precision required for effective seal design. The indigenous figure holding a bow—a controversial choice even then—required clean lines. Lines that could be reproduced clearly whether carved in stone, pressed in wax, or printed on paper.
Copperplate engraving demanded extraordinary discipline. Lines had to be clean, reproducible, legible at small scales. This technical constraint shaped the visual style of many early state seals. Strong outlines. Symmetrical compositions. Simplified allegorical figures. The engraver's burin became a tool not just for reproduction, but for translating political ideas into durable visual form.
Evolution of Artistic Styles
State seals evolved alongside broader movements in American visual culture. Each era brought its own aesthetic sensibilities.
The Neoclassical Period (1780s-1820s) brought Greek and Roman influences to American civic art. New York's seal, adopted in 1778 and refined in 1882, features classical allegorical figures Liberty and Justice flanking a shield. A composition that could have been lifted from Renaissance medal design. The heraldic tinctures of azure and gules, the placement of the figures, even the ribbon work—all demonstrate sophisticated understanding of European artistic conventions.
Victorian Ornamentalism (1850s-1890s) introduced more elaborate decorative elements. California's seal, designed in 1849 during the Gold Rush, features the Roman goddess Minerva. A bold artistic choice representing wisdom and strategic warfare. The thirty-one stars circling the design. The ships in San Francisco Bay. The miner at work. Each element was carefully composed to tell a visual story about the state's identity and aspirations.
Modernist Simplification (1900s-1960s) saw many states revise their seals to emphasize clarity over ornamentation. Alaska's seal, adopted in 1910 and revised in 1927, strips away Victorian excess in favor of bold, readable imagery: mining, agriculture, maritime commerce rendered in clean, strong lines. Lines suitable for reproduction across media.
Symbolism as Visual Narrative
State seals function as compressed visual narratives. Every element carries meaning. A rising sun suggests hope and new beginnings. Agricultural tools represent prosperity and honest labor. Ships symbolize trade and maritime heritage. Native flora and fauna root the design in specific geography.
These symbols weren't chosen arbitrarily. Many were influenced by emblem books—illustrated volumes popular in Europe from the 16th through 18th centuries that codified symbolic meanings. An oak tree meant strength and endurance. An anchor represented hope. A plow signified cultivation and civilization. American seal designers drew from this established visual vocabulary while adapting it to New World contexts.
The composition itself carried meaning. Circular seals suggested unity and eternal continuity. Shields implied defense and protection. The arrangement of elements—what appears at the top versus the bottom, left versus right—followed heraldic principles with roots in medieval European art.
Consider Virginia's seal, adopted in 1776. Designed by George Wythe with artistic execution by an unknown engraver. The central image of Virtus, the Roman goddess of virtue, standing over a defeated tyranny was a radical political statement rendered in classical artistic language. The composition borrowed directly from Roman imperial coins and Renaissance medals. It demonstrated how American artists synthesized European visual traditions to express distinctly American political ideals.
Anonymous Artisans, Lasting Influence
Unlike painters whose signatures are celebrated, many artists behind state seals remain anonymous. Their work was collaborative. Often revised over decades by legislative committees. Shaped by politicians as much as by artistic vision. The original designer of the Great Seal of Idaho (1891) remains unknown, though the seal's imagery—a woman representing justice and liberty, a miner, agricultural abundance—shows sophisticated compositional balance.
Yet their influence persists in ways few gallery paintings can match. Seals appear on flags, in courtrooms, on textbooks, across public buildings. They form part of a broader system of
official state symbols that quietly educate generations about history, values, and identity through imagery rather than words. As design objects, they represent some of the longest continuously used artworks in American history—visual artifacts that have outlasted most contemporary paintings and sculptures.
The anonymity reveals something about the nature of civic art. These weren't personal artistic statements but collaborative creations meant to represent collective identity. The artist's ego yielded to communal purpose. This makes state seals perhaps the purest form of democratic art: created for the people, by the people, to represent the people.
Contemporary Reconsideration
In recent decades, renewed interest in visual culture has brought fresh attention to these symbols. Designers, historians, Indigenous activists increasingly study state seals not just as legal emblems, but as cultural artifacts. Artifacts that reveal how art functions within public life—and whose stories get told through official imagery.
Some states have reconsidered designs that perpetuate harmful stereotypes or historical inaccuracies. Minnesota redesigned its state seal in 2024, replacing imagery criticized for depicting Indigenous people in ways that reinforced colonial narratives. The artistic challenge was considerable: how to create new imagery that honors complex history while maintaining the visual clarity and symbolic power that makes seals effective.
These debates mirror broader conversations in contemporary art. Representation. Power. Visual culture. Artists today work with the same fundamental questions that faced Paul Revere and his contemporaries: How do images create meaning? Whose stories deserve visual representation? What makes a symbol resonate across generations?
Why State Seals Matter as Art
Understanding state seals as works of visual art allows us to see American history through a different lens. Art doesn't exist only in museums. Sometimes the most influential artworks are embedded in everyday symbols. Symbols that shape how societies express authority and belonging.
These designs represent a distinct American contribution to the global tradition of civic imagery. While drawing on European heraldic conventions, American seal designers adapted these forms to express democratic ideals, regional identity, national aspiration. The result is a visual archive. An archive documenting how Americans saw themselves—and wanted to be seen—across nearly 250 years.
As with any art form, the true richness emerges through close observation.
Each state seal invites examination—not as static emblems, but as layered compositions. Compositions where artistic choices reflect evolving notions of identity, authority, place. The goddess figures. The agricultural implements. The rising suns. The protective shields. All were conscious artistic decisions made by skilled craftspeople working within constraints of medium, function, political purpose.
In an age of digital reproduction and mass media, state seals continue to perform their original function: translating complex civic ideas into visual form. They stand as testament to the power of applied art. Proof that the most enduring artworks are not always those we frame and hang, but those we live with daily—symbols so familiar we forget they are art at all.