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    Portrait of a Killer

    Page 43
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      public views of

      Scots Observer

      “Scotus”

      Scrapbook of Ripper clippings

      Searle, Percy Knight

      Secret rooms

      Secret studios

      Self-portraits of Sickert

      Seminal fluid, absence of

      Serial killers

      Servant of Abraham: Self Portrait, The (painting), Sickert

      Sexual activity, evidence of

      Sexual frustration

      Sexuality, Victorian views

      Sexually transmitted diseases

      Sickert and

      Shakespeare, William

      Hamlet

      Henry V

      Shaw, Bertram John Eugene

      She (play)

      Sheepshanks, Anne

      Sheepshanks, Richard

      Shulgin, Irene

      Sickert, Bernhard (brother)

      Sickert, Christine Angus (wife)

      Sickert, Ellen Cobden (wife)

      character traits

      divorce from Walter

      DNA tests

      feminism of

      letters

      marriage relationship

      psychic pain

      purchase of knives

      separation from Walter

      wedding of

      See also Cobden, Ellen Melicent Ashburner

      Sickert, Helena “Nellie” (sister)

      and Walter’s fistula

      Sickert, Johann Jurgen (grandfather)

      Sickert, Leonard (brother)

      Sickert, Nelly (mother)

      See also Henry, Eleanor Louisa Moravia

      Sickert, Oswald Adalbert (father)

      and Walter

      and Walter’s surgery

      writings of

      Sickert, Oswald Valentine (brother)

      Sickert, Robert (brother)

      Sickert, Walter Richard

      as actor

      aliases

      alibis

      alleged visit to Normandy

      appearance

      art criticism

      associates of

      Camden Town murder

      Chapman murder

      character traits

      childhood

      Cornwall connection

      and crime scenes

      death of

      and death of Christine

      Dimmock murder

      divorce

      DNA of

      education

      family of

      fear of diseases

      fingerprints

      fistula surgeries

      health problems

      identity issues

      and Jack the Ripper

      knowledge of anatomy

      knowledge of forensic science

      letters

      papers written on

      libel suit

      marriage of

      to Christine Angus

      to Thérèse Lessore

      murders by

      motivation for

      unacknowledged

      as murder suspect

      and music halls

      and neckerchiefs

      and newspapers

      old age

      and paper

      peculiar behavior

      penile malformation

      and poetry

      police viewed by

      and prostitutes

      psychological problems

      psychopathology of

      remarriage

      secret rooms

      sexual frustration

      sexual incapacity

      stage name

      studio models

      studios of

      secret

      and Terry, Ellen

      travel

      and uniforms

      wanderings

      and watermarks

      and Whistler

      and women

      writing on walls

      See also Artworks, by Sickert

      Sickert Trust

      Simmons, George (police constable)

      Single-donor (clean) profile

      Sirhan, Sirhan

      Sitwell, Osbert

      Sketches by Sickert

      in Cornwall guest book

      murder scenes

      music-hall performances

      nude males

      paper of

      See also Artworks, by Sickert

      Skinner, Keith, Jack the Ripper: Letters from Hell

      Slade School of Fine Art, London

      Slaughterhouse transvestite

      Sloper, Ally

      Smith, Emma

      Smith, Henry (police commissioner)

      From Constable to Commissioner

      Smith, Howard

      Smith, William (police constable)

      Social class of Sickert’s models

      Social reform, Victorian ideas

      Soldier, unidentified, and Tabran’s murder

      Southport, murdered boy

      Southport Visiter

      Souvenirs, of psychopathic crimes

      Spitalfields, London

      doss-houses

      Spratling, John (police inspector)

      Spying, psychopaths and

      “Square Mile.” See City of London

      Stabbings

      Stage name, “Mr. Nemo”

      Stalking, by psychopaths

      Stamps, difficulty in testing

      Star newspaper

      Stationery, watermarks

      Stealing, Sickert and

      Steer, Wilson

      Stephenson, W. H.

      Sternum, penetration of

      Stevenson, Robert Louis, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

      Stocks, Mr. and Mrs. Dimmock (landlords)

      “Stone Ginger, A.” Sickert, article in The New Age

      Stowe, Harriet Beecher

      Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The, Stevenson

      See also Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (play)

      Strangulation

      Stratton, Charles Sherwood (Tom Thumb)

      Stride, Elizabeth “Long Liz”

      murder of

      Stride, John Thomas

      Studios

      secret

      Suicides

      Druitt

      medieval era

      of women, Victorian views

      Sulzbach, Edward

      Summer Night ( Nuit d’Été) (painting), Sickert

      Sun (London)

      Surgery, nineteenth century

      for fistula

      Surgical skills, alleged

      Suspects in Ripper case

      Sutton, Denys

      Swanson, Donald (chief inspector)

      Swift, Jonathan

      Tabran, Henry Samuel

      Tabran, Martha

      murder of

      Tanner, Elizabeth

      Teasing of police

      Telephone

      Tempera paint

      Terry, Ellen

      Theater, Victorian era London

      See also Music halls, Victorian London

      Themes in Sickert’s art

      Thief-takers

      Thompson, John (police surgeon)

      Throat, cutting of

      Time of death, determination of

      Times, The (London)

      art student story

      letters to

      and murders

      and photography

      “Titine” (Madame Villain)

      Tom Thumb (Charles Sherwood Stratton)

      Tool marks

      Torso, female

      East End discovery

      Tower of London

      Tower Subway

      Trace evidence from Ripper murders

      Traps

      Travel

      Treuherz, Julian

      Treves, Frederick

      Trial by ordeal

      Trollope, Anthony

      Trophies of psychopathic crimes

      Turner, Henry

      Two Studies of a Venetian Woman’s Head (sketch), Sickert

      Uncatalogued Sickert artworks

      Uncles and Aunts (play)

      Unidentified victims

    &
    nbsp; Uniforms, military, Sickert and

      Union Jack, The (play)

      United States, death investigation standards

      Unsolved murders

      Unwin, T. Fisher

      Uremia (kidney failure)

      Urinary tract infections

      Uteri, human, purchase attempt

      Vacher l’Eventreur et les crimes sadiques, Lacassagne

      Valentine’s School, Blackheath

      Vanbrugh, John

      Venereal disease

      Victims, blaming of

      Victoria (queen of England)

      Villain, Madame (“Titine”)

      Violence

      in Sickert’s art

      Violent crimes

      disguises and

      Virginia, murder investigations

      Virginia Institute of Forensic Science and Medicine

      Von Recklinghausen disease

      Voyeurs, psychopaths as

      Waddle, William

      Wainright, Henry and Thomas

      Wales, Edward, Prince of

      Wall, Joseph

      Wall writing, Ripper message

      Walter Sickert: Drawings, Robins

      Wandering:

      by Oswald Sickert

      by Walter Sickert

      Warren, Charles (Metropolitan Police commissioner)

      Watching

      Sickert and

      Watermarks

      Watkins, Edward (police constable)

      Weapons for murder

      Webb, Beatrice

      Weekly Dispatch (London)

      West Sussex Public Record Office

      Whirlwind, The

      Whistler, Beatrice, death of

      Whistler, James McNeill

      death of

      destruction of artwork

      DNA tests

      Sickert and

      letters

      studio of

      Whitechapel, London

      Whitechapel Workhouse mortuary

      Wilde, Oscar

      Wildore, Frederick

      Wilson, Elizabeth

      Winter, Caroline

      Witness statements

      conflicting, in Chapman murder

      Kelly murder

      Tabran murder

      Woman, Ripper as

      Women:

      Sickert and

      nude paintings of

      Victorian views

      Women’s suffrage, Sickert and

      Wood, Robert

      Workhouses

      World Health Organization (WHO), and sociopathy

      World War I

      World War II, records destroyed during

      Wren, Christopher

      Writing, on wall

      Writings:

      of Oswald Sickert

      of Walter Sickert, violence in

      Y profile of paper

      BK4173 PORTRAIT OF KILLER FRAUX

      Frau Sickert, Walter Sickert’s great-grandmother.

      Tate Gallery Archive, Photograph Collection.

      Eleanor Louisa Moravia Sickert, Walter Sickert’s mother, in 1911.

      Tate Gallery Archive, Photograph Collection.

      Oswald Adalbert Sickert, Walter Sickert’s father.

      Tate Gallery Archive, Photograph Collection.

      Walter Sickert with his flaxen curls, age two, about 1862.

      Tate Gallery Archive, Photograph Collection.

      Walter, age nine, after his three surgeries, about 1869.

      Tate Gallery Archive, Photograph Collection.

      Walter the actor, on tour in Liverpool at age twenty.

      Tate Gallery Archive, Photograph Collection.

      Ellen Cobden, the daughter of a famous politician and first wife of Jack the Ripper. She divorced Sickert in 1899. By courtesy of the trustees of the Cobden Estate, with acknowledgments to West Sussex Record Office.

      Walter at age twenty-four, James McNeill Whistler’s apprentice, about 1884. Tate Gallery Archive, Photograph Collection.

      One of Sickert’s self-portraits, one of Sickert’s many looks.

      Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.

      Drawing of a man stabbing a woman to death, and a second of a brute lunging for a woman. Both are in the collection of Oswald Sickert. walter’s father, who was a professional artist, but some believe that these were drawn by Walter as a youth. Collection of Islington Libraries, London.

      Mary Ann Nichols, the second victim, is pictured here in the mortuary after her autopsy, her wounds discreetly covered.

      Public Record Office, London.

      Sickert sketch Venetian Studies brings to mind the murdered Mary Ann Nichols, whose eyes were wide open when her body was discovered.

      Current location and ownership of original unknown.

      Annie Chapman in the mortuary, her savage wounds hidden from view. She was the third of the Ripper’s highly publicized murders. (I say “highly publicized” because the six murders were not the only ones he committed.)

      Material in the Public Record Office, London, in the copyright of the Metropolitan Police is reproduced by permission of the Metropolitan Police Authority.

      The Ripper’s mutilation of Elizabeth Stride, the fourth victim, was interrupted by a pony cart turning into the yard.

      Material in the Public Record Office, London, in the copyright of the Metropolitan Police is reproduced by permission of the Metropolitan Police Authority.

      The violence escalates. Less than an hour after Stride’s murder, the Ripper slashed Catherine Eddows almost beyond recognition and took her uterus.

      Material in the Public Record Office, London, in the copyright of the Metropolitan Police is reproduced by permission of the Metropolitan Police Authority.

      Sickert’s painting Putana a Casa resembles mortuary photographs of Eddows and is suggestive of the mutilations to the right side of Eddows’s face.

      Collection of Patricia Cornwell.

      Catherine Eddows’s facial mutilations included cuts through her lower eyelids, her nose almost severed from her face, and an earlobe slashed off.

      Material in the Public Record Office, London, in the copyright of the Metropolitan Police is reproduced by permission of the Metropolitan Police Authority.

      Sickert’s sketch He Killed His Father in a Fight displays a violent imagination and a similarity to the Mary Kelly murder scene, especially with its wooden bed frame. The Whitworth Art Gallery, The University of Manchester.

      With the murder of Mary Kelly, the Ripper’s violence turns to frenzy. The young, attractive Mary Kelly’s face is obliterated, her breasts, genitals, and organs removed, including her heart.

      Material in the Public Record Office, London, in the copyright of the Metropolitan Police is reproduced by permission of the Metropolitan Police Authority.

      Persuasion is from Sickert’s Camden Town Murder series. In 1907, a prostitute named Emily Dimmock was murdered about a mile from Sickert’s house. Bristol Museums and Art Gallery.

      A map of the Whitechapel area, the Ripper’s East End killing ground during the summer, fall, and early winter of 1888.

      Public Record Office, London.

      Metropolitan Police notice, September 30, 1888. After the double murder of Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddows, the increasingly frustrated police posted notices throughout London. With kind permission of the Metropolitan Police Service.

      Cover art from Famous Crimes and the beginnings of the sensational Ripper legend that would continue for more than a century.

      Collection of

      Patricia Cornwell.

      In October 1888, a female torso was found at the construction site of the new Scotland Yard building. With kind permission of the Metropolitan Police Service.

      Punch or The London Charivari, September 22, 1888, page 130. Londoners criticized and blamed the police for not catching the Ripper.

      Collection of Patricia Cornwell.

      “Dear Boss.” Many of the Ripper letters were addressed to Metropolitan Police Commissioner Charles Warren. Collection of Patricia Cornwell.

      Falsely accused: The Duke of Clarence. His respons
    e to blackmail was money, not murder. Collection of Patricia Cornwell.

      Telegram from the Ripper to Inspector Abberline. Sickert was extremely fond of sending telegrams—and so was the Ripper. Public Record Office, London.

      A view of the Royal London Hospital Patient Record Book. The hospital was the only one in the East End. I believe that none of the Ripper’s victims survived long enough to be admitted. Royal London Hospital Archives.

      Pages 44 and 45 of Inspector Abberline’s private clipping book. Abberline headed the Ripper investigation, but never revealed how he worked the cases or how he felt about failing to solve the most notorious crimes of his career. With kind permission of the Metropolitan Police Service.

      Some art experts recognize a professional artistic hand and Sickert’s technique in what may at first glance appear to be crude drawings in these three Ripper letters. Public Record Office, London.

      Art and paper experts now believe that what was once assumed to be blood in Ripper letters is actually consistent with etching ground that was finger painted or applied with a paintbrush. Public Record Office, London.

      Ripper letter written with a paintbrush. Public Record Office, London.

      The “Dr. Openshaw” Ripper letter (right) with a watermark that matches the watermark in a “Dear Jimmy” letter Sickert wrote to Whistler (above). Right, Public Record Office, London; above, Permission of Special Collections Department, Glasgow University Library.

      The oldest DNA ever tested in a criminal investigation yielded a mitochondrial DNA sequence from the backs of stamps on the Dr. Openshaw letter’s envelope that is a component of mitochondrial DNA sequences found on another Ripper envelope and two Sickert envelopes. Royal London Hospital Archives.

      The Ripper’s fingerprints, on a letter mailed to the Metropolitan Police in 1896. Public Record Office, London.

      A Ripper letter on a torn bit of cheap paper, with the note that he can’t afford stationery. Public Record Office, London.

      Jack the Ripper’s Bedroom, painted by Sickert in 1908. It is a view of his bedroom in the house where he was living at the time Emily Dimmock was murdered.

     


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