Jack the Ripper's Bedroom | |
---|---|
Artist | Walter Sickert |
Year | c.1906-1907 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Movement | Impressionism |
Subject | The bedroom of serial killer Jack the Ripper |
Dimensions | 50.8 cm× 40.7 cm(20.0 in× 16.0 in) |
Location | Manchester Art Gallery |
Jack the Ripper's Bedroom is an oil on canvas painting by German-born British artist Walter Sickert, painted from c. 1906 to 1907. It depicts the darkly lit bedroom of Jack the Ripper, the culprit of at least five of London's Whitechapel murders in 1888.
The model bedroom was actually Sickert's own bedroom in his flat at 6 Mornington Crescent in London; the landlady of the flat told Sickert she believed the bedroom had belonged to the Ripper in 1888. Discussion of the piece is tied to controversial theories about Sickert as a possible culprit or associate of the Ripper, which started in the 1970s after the release of Stephen Knight's book Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution . The painting has mostly stayed in the Manchester Art Gallery since 1980.
Jack the Ripper was the culprit in at least five of the 1888 Whitechapel murders of many women in London. Whitechapel was a "notoriously rough" area at the East End of the city. The five victims tied to the Ripper, all prostitutes, were Mary Ann Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes, and Mary Jane Kelly. Jack the Ripper's identity was never discovered. [1] [2] [3] [4] Press coverage of the murders was extensive, and the murders have stayed in the public consciousness since then. [5]
Walter Sickert was a German-born British artist. [1] He was fascinated with the Ripper, [6] and his friends said he would dress up as the Ripper. [7] [8] With his paintings, he had an "[underlying] desire to confront taboo social subjects in order to shake the complacency he believed dominated English subject matter". At the time of painting Jack the Ripper's Bedroom, he lived in a flat at 6 Mornington Crescent, Camden Town, North London. [2] [9] [10] Camden Town is about 5 miles from Whitechapel. [11] He moved there in 1905. [12] When Sickert rented the flat, his landlady, Mrs. Louisa Jones, had told him she suspected the previous tenant, who lived there in 1888, was the Ripper. She said that the tenant had gone out on the events of days relevant to the murders, and left once the murders stopped. She told Sickert the name of the tenant, which he wrote in the flyleaf of a book. The book was lent to Albert Rutherson, who lost it. In 1907, Camden Town resident Emily Dimmock had her throat slit in the Camden Town Murder, and Sickert may have connected that murder to the Ripper. [2] [9] He also made four paintings depicting the murder, named The Camden Town Murder . [13]
Jack the Ripper's Bedroom is an oil on canvas painting, painted from c. 1906 to 1907. In the scene, drawn in an "illegible" style, a darkly lit middle-class [14] bedroom is seen through an open doorway and a hallway. The model for the bedroom was the bedroom of Sickert's flat. There is pink light coming through the horizontal slats of a window's blinds at the back of the room. The furniture, which includes a dressing table and two chairs, is indistinct enough to prevent the viewer from making out certain details. The Manchester Art Gallery's description of the painting says the indistinction makes "it conceivable that there is a person sitting on the [center] chair, but there is no one there." [2] [9] [10] In 6 Mornington Crescent, the doorway to the bedroom's hallway was located at the back of the house, connected to the first-floor front room. [9]
Author Wendy Baron, writing for the Yale University Press, calls the painting "moody" and "sinister", and highlights Sickert's talent for composing melodrama. [9]
The painting is cited as an early example of Jack the Ripper in the arts. [14] It was bequeathed by Mars Mary Ciely Tatlock to the Manchester Art Gallery in 1980. [2] [9] In 2002, it was temporarily at the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool for the exhibition "Sickert: A Life in Art". [10]
The painting has been used as evidence of the controversial theory that Sickert was the culprit or associate of Jack the Ripper. [6] [15] [16] The theory started when Joseph Sickert, Walter's son, told author Stephen Knight that Walter had told him the truth about the murders, and that they were carried about by William Gull, and aided by John Netley and Robert Anderson. Knight's research led him to the theory that Robert Anderson was not a culprit, but rather Sickert. Knight published this theory in his 1976 book, Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution . Joseph Sickert revealed in 1978 that the story supposedly told by Walter was a hoax, but the theory still grew in popularity. The theory was again published in Jean Overton Fuller's 1990 book, Sickert and the Ripper Crimes, and Patricia Cornwell's 2002 book Portrait of a Killer . [14]
Cornwell used Jack the Ripper's Bedroom as evidence of her theory. [17] In 2002, she infamously tore apart one of the Camden Town Murder paintings to retrieve Sickert's DNA. [18] A 2019 article in Science stated that Cornwell's allegation that Sickert was the Ripper was based on a DNA analysis of letters that "many experts believe ... to be fake" and that "another genetic analysis of the letters claimed the murderer could have been a woman". [19]
Author Jennifer Dasal says the art world "by-and-large" has "scoffed at the assertion of Walter Sickert as Jack the Ripper". [20] Baron calls the theory a "fantasy", and says "it is uncertain whether [Jack the Ripper's Bedroom] suggested the Jack the Ripper title to him, or vice versa". She says the theories "pay insufficient heed to the imperatives which motivated Sickert as a painter", and that his business in Camden Town was "of a painter in at a certain stage of technical development". [15] Dasal says it's reminiscent of "those who willingly pay to stay in the Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast in Fall River, Massachusetts--the frisson of being connected to a killer, however loose, is a huge draw". [16]
From Hell is a graphic novel by writer Alan Moore and artist Eddie Campbell, originally published in serial form from 1989 to 1998. The full collection was published in 1999 by Top Shelf Productions.
Walter Richard Sickert was a German-born British painter and printmaker who was a member of the Camden Town Group of Post-Impressionist artists in early 20th-century London. He was an important influence on distinctively British styles of avant-garde art in the mid and late 20th century.
Patricia Cornwell is an American crime writer. She is known for her best-selling novels featuring medical examiner Kay Scarpetta, of which the first was inspired by a series of sensational murders in Richmond, Virginia, where most of the stories are set. The plots are notable for their emphasis on forensic science, which has influenced later TV treatments of police work. Cornwell has also initiated new research into the Jack the Ripper killings, incriminating the popular British artist Walter Sickert. Her books have sold more than 120 million copies.
A series of murders that took place in the East End of London between August and November 1888 have been attributed to an unidentified assailant nicknamed Jack the Ripper. Since then, the identity of the Ripper has been widely debated, with over 100 suspects named. Though many theories have been advanced, experts find none widely persuasive, and some are hardly taken seriously at all.
Mornington Crescent is a terraced street in Camden Town, Camden, London, England. It was built in the 1820s, on a greenfield site just to the north of central London. Many of the houses were subdivided into flats during the Victorian era, and what was the street's communal garden is now the Carreras Building. Mornington Crescent tube station which opened in 1907, takes its name from the street.
Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution is a book written by Stephen Knight first published in 1976. It proposed a solution to five murders in Victorian London that were blamed on an unidentified serial killer known as "Jack the Ripper".
Portrait of a Killer: Jack the Ripper—Case Closed (ISBN 0-425-19273-3) is a 2002 nonfiction book by crime novelist Patricia Cornwell that presents the theory that Walter Sickert, a German-British painter, was the 19th-century serial killer known as Jack the Ripper.
Montague John Druitt was an English barrister and educator who is known for being a suspect in the Jack the Ripper murders of 1888.
The Camden Town Group was a group of English Post-Impressionist artists founded in 1911 and active until 1913. They gathered frequently at the studio of painter Walter Sickert in the Camden Town area of London.
Jack the Ripper, an unidentified serial killer active in and around Whitechapel in 1888, has been featured in works of fiction ranging from gothic novels published at the time of the murders to modern motion pictures, televised dramas and video games.
Jean Overton Fuller was a British author best known for her book Madeleine, the story of Noor Inayat Khan, an Allied SOE agent during the Second World War.
Jack the Ripper was an unidentified serial killer who was active in and around the impoverished Whitechapel district of London, England, in 1888. In both criminal case files and the contemporaneous journalistic accounts, the killer was also called the Whitechapel Murderer and Leather Apron.
The Whitechapel murders were committed in or near the impoverished Whitechapel district in the East End of London between 3 April 1888 and 13 February 1891. At various points some or all of these eleven unsolved murders of women have been ascribed to the notorious unidentified serial killer known as Jack the Ripper.
Thomas Horrocks Openshaw was an English Victorian and Edwardian era surgeon perhaps best known for his brief involvement in attempting to solve the notorious Jack the Ripper murders of 1888.
Sherlock Holmes Versus Jack the Ripper is an adventure game for Microsoft Windows and Xbox 360, developed by Ukrainian studio Frogwares and distributed by Focus Home Interactive. It is the fifth game in the Sherlock Holmes series of adventure games developed by Frogwares. The game takes place in the London district of Whitechapel in 1888, the historical site of the Jack the Ripper murders.
The Camden Town murder was a murder which took place in Camden Town, London, England, in 1907. Robert Wood, an artist, was tried for the murder of sex worker Emily Dimmock and acquitted after a defence by Edward Marshall Hall.
The Camden Town Murder is a title given to a group of four paintings by Walter Sickert painted in 1908. The paintings have specific titles, such as the problem picture What Shall We Do for the Rent or What Shall We Do to Pay the Rent.
Thérèse Lessore was a British artist who worked in oil and watercolour. She was a founder member of the London Group, and the third wife of Walter Sickert.
Mary Godwin (1887–1960) was a British oil painter, water colourist and etcher, who often chose landscapes, interiors, and figures as subjects. She studied at the Women’s Department of King’s College with John Byam Shaw, and at Westminster Technical Institute with Walter Sickert and Harold Gilman. She was influenced by the Camden Town Group, and joined its successor, The London Group (LG) in 1914.
Christine Drummond Angus was a British illustrator and embroiderer. She made several pieces for the furniture designer Ambrose Heal and her designs were often figurative and included illustrations of children. She was married to the painter Walter Sickert from 1911 until her death in 1920.
{{cite news}}
: |last2=
has generic name (help)