Book Read Free

Portrait of a Killer

Page 44

by Patricia Cornwell


  Ennui by Sickert. Leaning over the left shoulder of the woman in the painting on the wall appears to be the partial face of a man coming up behind her. © Tate Gallery, London/Art Resource, NY.

  Sickert’s stage name when he was an actor was “Mr. Nemo” or “Mr. Nobody.” On this Ripper telegram to the police “Mr. Nobody” is crossed out. Public Record Office, London.

  Ripper letter with “R. St. w” initials at the bottom. Sickert sometimes used the initials “W” or “R” or “St.” Sometimes he was W. St. (Walter Sickert). Sometimes he was W (Walter), sometimes he was R (Richard). Is this a taunt? Public Record Office, London.

  A Ripper letter with the drawing of a knife blade. Small but sharp.

  Public Record Office, London.

  The Ripper displays his facility with Latin in this note, signed “Mathematicus.” Sickert was fluent in Latin, too, and known for his mathematical and scientific mind. Public Record Office, London.

  Ripper’s notorious “Ha Ha Ha” runs through dozens of his letters.

  Public Record Office, London.

  Note found in a bottle found on the shore between Deal and Sandwich, two towns across the Straits of Dover from Sickert’s beloved France. Public Record Office, London.

  The Lizard guest house in Cornwall today. © Cornwell Enterprises.

  Annotations and drawings in The Lizard guest book are believed to have been done by Sickert, possibly in October 1889. Sickert was quite familiar with Cornwall, and The Lizard was a haven for artists and the London upper class. Collection of Patricia Cornwell.

  Compare this drawing in a Ripper letter to the drawing in the guest book. Public Record Office, London.

  Drawing in The Lizard guest book believed to be by Sickert.

  Collection of Patricia Cornwell.

  Drawing of a “Pearly King” from a Ripper letter.

  Public Record Office, London.

  Left: The Lizard guest book. Right: a Ripper letter. Some art experts believe the two drawings were done by the same person and hint of Sickert’s technique. Sickert doodled, sometimes drawing what appear to be childish cartoons and stick figures. His father did sketches and scripts for Punch and Judy.

  Left, Collection of Patricia Cornwell; right, Public Record Office, London.

  Stick figures in a Sickert letter to Jacques-Emile Blanche.

  Stick figures in this Ripper letter are reminiscent of Punch and Judy violence. Another Ripper letter uses the return address of “Punch & Judy St.” Public Record Office, London.

  The sickly but gentle Christine Angus (middle), a former Sickert art student and his second wife. Tate Gallery Archive, Photograph Collection.

  THE MANY FACES OF SICKERT:

  Charming and handsome.

  Collection of Islington Libraries, London.

  A top hat and a shadow.

  Collection of Islington Libraries, London.

  When the mood struck, he shaved his head.

  Collection of Islington Libraries, London.

  Sickert with Thérèse Lessore, his third wife, in his paper landfill, the final days.

  Illustrated London News Picture Library.

  TITLES BY PATRICIA CORNWELL

  SCARPETTA SERIES

  Book of the Dead

  Predator

  Trace

  Blow Fly

  The Last Precinct

  Black Notice

  Point of Origin

  Unnatural Exposure

  Cause of Death

  From Potter’s Field

  The Body Farm

  Cruel & Unusual

  All That Remains

  Body of Evidence

  Postmortem

  ANDY BRAZIL SERIES

  Isle of Dogs

  Southern Cross

  Hornet’s Nest

  OTHER FICTION

  At Risk

  NONFICTION

  Portrait of a Killer: Jack the Ripper—Case Closed

  BIOGRAPHY

  Ruth, A Portrait: The Story of Ruth Bell Graham

  (also published as A Time for Remembering:

  The Story of Ruth Bell Graham)

  OTHER WORKS

  Food to Die For: Secrets from Kay Scarpetta’s Kitchen

  Life’s Little Fable

  Scarpetta’s Winter Table

 

 

 


‹ Prev