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Camera-ready comic art drawing for Gasoline Alley

American History Museum

Comic art by Frank King, Gasoline Alley (Copyright Tribune Media Services)
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Object Details

graphic artist

Moores, Dick
King, Frank

publisher

Tribune Printing Company

Description (Brief)

This pen-and-ink drawing, prepared for the Gasoline Alley newspaper comic strip, shows character Walt Wallet being scolded for trying to walk Effie home. She waves goodbye, but Wallet sees little hope in her attentions.
Richard Arnold "Dick" Moores (1909-1986) worked as an assistant to Chester Gould on the Dick Tracy comic strip early in his career. Moores continued to work on other strips and branched out into animation and comic book illustration, working on titles such as Mickey Mouse, Scamp, Donald Duck, and Alice in Wonderland. In 1956 Frank King asked Moores to assist on the daily strip Gasoline Alley, which Moores took over completely after King’s retirement in 1959. When the Sunday artist for Gasoline Alley retired in 1975, Moores took over that work as well, and continued drawing the strip until his death in 1986.
Gasoline Alley (1918- ) originated on a black-and-white Sunday page for The Chicago Tribune called The Rectangle, a collaborative page with contributions by different artists. One corner of "The Rectangle," drawn by Frank King, was devoted to the discussions between four men about their cars, an impetus for the name of the strip Gasoline Alley. Within a year the strip began appearing in the daily newspapers. Gasoline Alley, whose original characters included Walt, Doc, Avery, Bill, and Skeezix, is noted for its use of characters who have continued to age naturally.

Location

Currently not on view

Credit Line

Newspaper Comics Council, Inc., New York, NY

date made

1966-08-13

ID Number

GA.22550

catalog number

22550

accession number

277502

Object Name

drawing

Object Type

Drawings

Other Terms

drawing; Pen and Ink

Physical Description

paper (overall material)
ink (overall material)

Measurements

overall: 18.5 cm x 54.8 cm; 7 5/16 in x 21 9/16 in

See more items in

Work and Industry: Graphic Arts
Popular Entertainment
Family & Social Life
Cultures & Communities
Comic Art
Communications
Art

Data Source

National Museum of American History

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ac-8b5c-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record ID

nmah_797246

Discover More

Peanuts comic strip of Lucy Van Pelt setting up a football for Charlie Brown to kick, which he misses when she moves the ball last minute.

References

Peanuts comic strip of Lucy Van Pelt setting up a football for Charlie Brown to kick, which he misses when she moves the ball last minute.

Comic Art

Peanuts comic strip of Lucy Van Pelt setting up a football for Charlie Brown to kick, which he misses when she moves the ball last minute.

Comic Art

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