Note that superconducting magnets can of course be charged,including freezing in an ambient field (as mentioned).
Interesting side effect: what does a "lossy" superconductor look like? For it to be "super", it has to have zero DC resistance, so, that's out; but maybe it could have AC resistance? And indeed, this seems to be the case; if nothing else, consider that YCBO remains a black ceramic (i.e., very lossy at visible frequencies) at all temperatures. Somewhere between -- quite literally, "DC to light"! -- it goes from a perfect conductor (at small signals) to a good absorber.
As it happens, the crossover happens at frequencies on the order of the electron coupling energy (~meV, so, far IR or thereabouts), and in fact, exposure to light above this energy level does locally destroy superconduction.
For larger signals, it happens that vortices can be popped open just by applying enough field. Like magnetic domains popping in ferromagnets. You get the same* Barkhausen noise, for essentially the same reason.

The bulk effect overall is called flux pinning, and is how that superconducting levitating magnet track demo is possible.
*Don't think I've seen this discussed in a paper properly, but that should be right!?
Anyway, the supercurrent does indeed flow on the surface, about a Debye scattering length deep. (This length describes the distance a charge's field carries through the material; in effect, the shielding ability of the material, or in a sense, the quantum equivalent of skin depth. Optical penetration depth in metals is related.) So, 10s-100s nm.
The current density is indeed quite high, which makes the local magnetic field extremely high -- if the critical field is exceeded, superconduction is lost. So a lot of surface area is desirable -- in fact, cables are made of a great many strands, embedded in a metal matrix (which also serves as an eddy current brake if quenching occurs, getting merely incredibly hot instead of explosive arcing breakdown?), drawn down to stretch the superconductor into very thin (micron) wires, and this is stacked up to get thousands of strands together.
It's Litz for DC.

(Mind, superconducting cable for AC, can't be metal matrix -- that'd be lossy -- this works just for DC cables and static magnets.)
Anyway, back to sort-of reality --
At the boundary between layers (some of) the induced current jumps from the inside to the outside and begins circulating on the other side. If you have a spiral conductor with 1 amp, there will be one amp flowing from beginning to end, and a bunch of current loops superimposed on that.
Yeah, note where the arrows first double up on each layer of the diagram I marked up.

Effectively, the proximity current wrapping around the conductor, where the above turn enters, is the image current of that winding entry.
Tim