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Gibson, Charles Dana

   Also found in: Hutchinson 0.02 sec.
Gibson, Charles Dana, 1867–1944, American illustrator, b. Roxbury, Mass., studied at the Art Students League and in Paris. His work for Life, Century, Harper's, Scribner's, Collier's Weekly, and other magazines established him as a leading illustrator and delineator of aristocratic social ideals, most notably that of the ideal woman who came to be known as the Gibson Girl. His incisive drawings of fashionable life often convey both humor and understanding. He illustrated numerous books, notably Anthony Hope's Prisoner of Zenda and R. H. Davis's Soldiers of Fortune. Among the books of his drawings are The Education of Mr. Pipp (1899), The Americans (1900), A Widow and Her Friends (1902), The Social Ladder (1902), and The Gibson Book (1906).

Gibson, Charles Dana

(born Sept. 14, 1867, Roxbury, Mass., U.S.—died Dec. 23, 1944, New York, N.Y.) U.S. illustrator. He studied at New York's Art Students League and began to contribute drawings to Life, Scribner's, Harper's, and Century. His “Gibson girl” drawings, relying on his wife as a model, defined the U.S. ideal of spirited feminine beauty at the turn of the century, and his refined pen-and-ink style was widely imitated. Collier's reportedly paid him the unprecedented sum of $50,000 to produce a double-page illustration every week for a year. He also published several collections of satirical drawings of high society.


Gibson, Charles Dana (1867–1944) cartoonist, illustrator; born in Roxbury, Mass. After studying at the Arts Students League in New York City, he contributed free-lance pen and ink society cartoons to Life and Puck magazines. He soon developed a bold photographic style that featured handsome men and the ideal American woman—a delicate, tousled-haired beauty that became universally known as "The Gibson Girl." His cartoons were featured in countless advertisements and inspired the fashions and manners of an entire generation.


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