One of Our Leisure Class
Gibson, Charles Dana, 1867-1944, artist · Charles Dana Gibson, 1909. Pen and ink on paper.
A woman in a striped dress bends over a sewing machine at left, her posture taut with labor; across the sparse room a man in a bowler hat and rumpled suit lounges on a wooden crate, arms folded, a bottle at his feet. The title's irony is the cartoon's entire argument: the man does nothing while the woman works. Gibson frames working-class domestic life not with sympathy but with the dry social comedy Life cultivated for its middle-class readership—the idle husband satirized through his studied ease and the visible evidence of drink beside him. No dialogue caption is needed; the compositional contrast does the work. The sketch style is characteristic Gibson, economical crosshatching giving both figures moral weight through posture alone.
About this artifact
- Creator
- Gibson, Charles Dana, 1867-1944, artist
- Date
- Charles Dana Gibson, 1909. Pen and ink on paper.
- Rights
- Public domain — free to view, share, and reuse.
- Restoration
- Digitally restored and hosted by comicbooks.com.
Part of our mission to preserve and restore the public-domain heritage of the medium.