
Support Your National Hero
Think this is the cricketer Alan Lamb on the vacuum.
Les Gibbard was described as "one of the finest political cartoonists of his generation”. He drew for The Guardian for a quarter of a century, producing an incisive daily pictorial commentary through five premierships, from Harold Wilson, Heath, Callaghan, Margaret Thatcher to John Major, and also worked as a caricaturist, journalist and film animator.
Les Gibbard was described as "one of the finest political cartoonists of his generation”. He drew for The Guardian for a quarter of a century, producing an incisive daily pictorial commentary through five premierships, from Harold Wilson, Heath, Callaghan, Margaret Thatcher to John Major, and also worked as a caricaturist, journalist and film animator.
Think this is the cricketer Alan Lamb on the vacuum.
Les Gibbard was described as "one of the finest political cartoonists of his generation”. He drew for The Guardian for a quarter of a century, producing an incisive daily pictorial commentary through five premierships, from Harold Wilson, Heath, Callaghan, Margaret Thatcher to John Major, and also worked as a caricaturist, journalist and film animator.
Les Gibbard was described as "one of the finest political cartoonists of his generation”. He drew for The Guardian for a quarter of a century, producing an incisive daily pictorial commentary through five premierships, from Harold Wilson, Heath, Callaghan, Margaret Thatcher to John Major, and also worked as a caricaturist, journalist and film animator.
$1,111.93
Support Your National Hero—
$1,111.93
Description
Think this is the cricketer Alan Lamb on the vacuum.
Les Gibbard was described as "one of the finest political cartoonists of his generation”. He drew for The Guardian for a quarter of a century, producing an incisive daily pictorial commentary through five premierships, from Harold Wilson, Heath, Callaghan, Margaret Thatcher to John Major, and also worked as a caricaturist, journalist and film animator.
Les Gibbard was described as "one of the finest political cartoonists of his generation”. He drew for The Guardian for a quarter of a century, producing an incisive daily pictorial commentary through five premierships, from Harold Wilson, Heath, Callaghan, Margaret Thatcher to John Major, and also worked as a caricaturist, journalist and film animator.











