"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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