Young Joey - Tree Trouble (Original)

Young Joey - Tree Trouble art by Denis Gifford

Young Joey - Tree Trouble (Original)


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Artist: Denis Gifford
Medium: Pen & Ink on Card
Size: 9" x 13" (230mm x 335mm)
Date: c. 1960
Code: GiffordYJ306

This is the unique original Pen & Ink drawing by Denis Gifford.

Previously unknown outing (not on the Wikki page) for Young Joey published in Young Marvelman issue 306, page 18.

Created written and drawn by future comics historian Denis Gifford. Gifford wrote, drew and often created a wide selection of back-up strips that featured in a number of the Marvelman titles, usually one-page humour strips, as well as the Marvelman Family strip in its own title.

Gifford used a variety of pen-names for the work, including 'Belteshazzar Oakworm', 'Clubtwee Gleeb' and 'Fred Granule Bepp', 'Joe King', 'Jack Upp' and 'Belle Tupp'.

These humour strips may have been reprinted across a number of titles in the L. Miller & Son stable.
  • Artist Biography
    Denis Gifford (26 December 1927 - 2000; London, UK)
    Denis Gifford was born in Forest Hill, London, on Boxing Day 1927. He made his first comic, 'The Ragtime', when he was still a kid. By the time he was fifteen he was spending his homework time drawing adventures of 'Pansy Potter' in The Beano magazine. After a brief spell as junior cartoonist on Reynold's News, he was called into the RAF, where he spent his duty weekends drawing a super-hero comic-book, 'Streamline', for a Manchester publisher. After demob he set up a studio with another cartoonist chum, Bob Monkhouse, producing complete comics for the many small publishers that proliferated in the late 1940s.

    Then he joined Knockout magazine, the top comic of the day, taking over the popular favourites 'Our Ernie' (created by Charles Holt) and 'Stonehenge Kit the Ancient Brit'. He also did a long spell on 'Marvelman' comics, and the daily satire strip 'Telestrip' in the London Evening News. Other comics he worked on were 'Simon the Simple Sleuth', 'William Wagtail' and 'Dicky Diddle'.

    The only comic Denis Gifford created himself was 'Steadfast McStaunch', which ran from 1950 to 1952. For some reason, Denis Gifford was allowed to sign his work, when most of the other British and Scottish artists working for publisher DC Thompson remained anonymous to their readership.

    Denis Gifford has written over 50 books, mostly on the subjects of comics and cinema, and can be regarded as one of British foremost comic experts. Ever since he was young, he collected comics, until his collection completely took over his house. He also created several programs for radio and television, the last one being the radio show 'A Hundred Laughs for a Ha'penny', about the history of comics, which he did in 1999 together with his old friend Bob Monkhouse. Denis Gifford died in May 2000.
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£0.00
£130.00
In Stock