The "Gibson Girl" is probably the best remembered of the artist's images. With her hair piled atop her head and a waist so tiny as to defy belief, the Gibson Girl represented a serene self-confidence that could surmount any problem. The envy of all who knew her, the Gibson Girl remained aloof of her surroundings but not to the extent of haughtiness. She was at once remote but yet accessible. The "Gibson Man," equally as handsome and self-assured as the Gibson Girl, provided her perfect partner. The Gibson Girl and the Gibson Man in some ways represent the "Barbie and Ken" dolls of the early 1900s as icons of popular Culture.
The coming of the First World War ended the public's romance with Gibson's images. The collective outlook changed from confident optimism to reserved cynicism - an outlook in which Gibson's perspective seemed out of place. His popularity waned but there is no ignoring his influence on popular culture during the first decades of the twentieth century.

