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HomeLife: The Gibson EraThe Complete Cartoon Archive › "Valerie was busy, exceedingly busy, arranging matters, in view of the great change impending"
"Valerie was busy, exceedingly busy, arranging matters, in view of the great change impending" by Gibson, Charles Dana, 1867-1944, artist
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com · view the restored high-resolution scan ↗
The Complete Cartoon Archive

"Valerie was busy, exceedingly busy, arranging matters, in view of the great change impending"

Gibson, Charles Dana, 1867-1944, artist · Charles Dana Gibson, 1911

A young woman of evident social standing sits alone at a cluttered round table, pen in hand, bent over correspondence with focused urgency. Papers spill to the floor; fabric — perhaps a wedding trousseau — drags across chairs beside her. The room is furnished with the comfortable density of upper-middle-class domesticity: framed picture, dressing chest, curtained window. No other figures appear; the drama is interior and implied. The caption, drawn from an accompanying story, positions Valerie as an agent of her own future — organizing, deciding — before some unnamed "great change," almost certainly marriage. Gibson frames female intelligence and industry sympathetically, a signature move: the Gibson Girl as competent woman, not passive ornament, navigating the social machinery of Edwardian America entirely on her own terms.

About this artifact

Creator
Gibson, Charles Dana, 1867-1944, artist
Date
Charles Dana Gibson, 1911
Rights
Public domain — free to view, share, and reuse.
Restoration
Digitally restored and hosted by comicbooks.com · high-resolution version available.

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