In Griffen 's collection
Alex Graham, Dog Biscuits (2021) pg.341 - Comic Strip
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Dog Biscuits (2021) pg.341

Comic Strip
2020
Ink
Sharpie pen
21.59 x 27.94 cm (8.5 x 11 in.)
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Description

Page from Alex Graham's Dog Biscuits in both the self-published (2021) and Fantagraphics editions (2022) of the story.

This page originally appeared on Alex's Instagram account on December 15, 2020.

Pencil, Sharpie pen and white out on copy paper.

Comment

Gussy ends his long walk from his car to the end of the pier to find Rosie drunk. This is the beginning of the end, although he doesn't know it yet. At this point in Alex Graham's serialized Instagram story Dog Biscuits her art and storytelling are really firing on all cylinders. The seagulls and Rosie waiting at the pier are referenced on the cover of the Fantagraphics edition cover.

Publication

  • Dog Biscuits
  • Fantagraphics
  • 2022-06-28
  • Interior page

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About Alex Graham

Alex Graham was a Scottish cartoonist and the creator of the well-known basset hound 'Fred Basset'. Born Alexander Steel Graham in Patrick, Glasgow, he studied at Dumfries Academy and served in the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders during World War II. After the war, he began selling cartoons to magazines like The New Yorker, Punch and Women's Journal. One of his 1953 cartoons for The New Yorker is presumably the origin of the catchphrase "Take me to your leader", that has been associated with extraterrestrials in films, comics and cartoons since. He joined DC Thomson's Dundee Weekly News, and created a comic strip called 'Wee Hughie' in 1945. Graham continued this feature throughout the 1950s and 1960s. In 1946, Graham created another comic for the paper, 'Our Bill'. A year later, he was present in the Sunday Graphic with 'Willy Nilly', and for 17 years, he made 'Briggs the Buttler' in Tatler Weekly. He was also the author of 'Graham's Golf Club' in Punch. On July 9, 1963, Graham began the comic strip with which he was most closely associated: 'Fred Basset', about a basset hound. Originally appearing in the Daily Mail, the strip eventually found its way to foreign publications through the Tribune Media Services. After Graham's death in 1991, the strip kept on appearing in reruns for eighteen months until Michael Martin took over in cooperation with Graham's daughter Arra