I must say the paintings he drew were very sick. No wonder people thought him to be the ripper.
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I saw a documentary on youtube about this fellow recently
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How about Goya, Grim? I cannot recall any mutilated corpses in Sickert, just rather sad and troubled people. Now if you want sick, Goya's etchings will do nicely, oh dear but he can't be the ripper, wrong period , wrong country. Not that improbability ever stops anyone from coming up with crazy theories.
Miss Marple
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Originally posted by Shelley View PostOne of Sickert's paintings are in a Gallery at Bath, i can't remember if it was a violet or an iris now. Which ever, it was a small oil painting, with simplicity.
I wish I had just one of his paintings hanging on my wall. I could be horrible and say that it would cover that nasty damp patch, but I happen to very much like Sickert. The Ripper he was not.
Cheers,
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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From what I have read about Sickert's life, he was a horrible man. He was most likely not the Ripper. However, he certainly lived a despicable life including rampant adultery. It is not surprising that his paintings were strange and disturbing in nature."Fallacies do not cease to be fallacies because they become fashions." - G.K. Chesterton
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Hello from an old sometime visitor who got kicked out during the crash of 08, or 09...!
Just want to throw in my 2cents and say that I think too much is read into there being some kind of resemblence between his paintings and the angle of Mary Kelly's body or whatever the theory is. It reminds me of the belief that Man Ray killed Elizabeth Short (Black Dahlia) because her body was positioned in a way that looked like one of his photographs. Hogwash!
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Originally posted by Steelysama View PostFrom what I have read about Sickert's life, he was a horrible man. He was most likely not the Ripper. However, he certainly lived a despicable life including rampant adultery. It is not surprising that his paintings were strange and disturbing in nature.
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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Originally posted by Graham View PostI have just the faintest, slightest impression that the only book you have ever read about Sickert was written by a person called Cornwell. Am I right?
Graham
I read this, by Stephen Ryder:
, a close friend, Jacques-Emile Blanche described Sickert in 1902 as an "immoralist... with a swarm of children of provenances which are not possible to count." Sickert was known to have had several mistresses, and was cited as being an adulterer by his first wife."Fallacies do not cease to be fallacies because they become fashions." - G.K. Chesterton
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