Cain Manor

Your Guide To All Things Cain™

An interesting suicide

If you’ve had first aid train­ing, I’m sure you’ve come across this woman.…
In 1900, the body of an uniden­ti­fied young woman, an appar­ent sui­cide, was pulled from the river Seine in Paris. Enchanted by the mys­te­ri­ous corpse’s beauty, a morgue worker made a plas­ter cast of the woman’s face. Copies of this “drowned Mona Lisa,” as Camus would later describe her, soon pro­lif­er­ated across Paris, appear­ing first in the city’s salons and finally in its lit­er­a­ture. Nabokov wrote a poem titled “L’Inconnue de la Seinne.” Rilke men­tioned her in his only novel. Man Ray pho­tographed her. A char­ac­ter in Louis Aragon’s novel Aurélien tries to res­ur­rect her.

In the The Sav­age God: A Study of Sui­cide, Al Alvarez writes, “I am told that a whole gen­er­a­tion of Ger­man girls mod­eled their looks on her… the Incon­nue became the erotic ideal of the period, as Bar­dot was for the 1950s.”

In 1958, the Incon­nue was used as the model for the face of Res­cue Annie, a pop­u­lar CPR train­ing man­nequin still in use today. Hers is per­haps the most kissed face of all time.

from www.kirchersociety.org via Neatorama

Wikipedia link

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