"Looking at them, she was reminded of more artistic images from the era, particularly a painting by Edgar Degas, now called
Interior (formerly known as The Rape).
In the artwork a partially dressed woman poses limply, melancholic, in a
cluttered and windowless bedroom, as a man stands blocking the door,
looking at her with hands stuffed in pockets. From the ornate wallpaper
to the slumped, partly bare body, it’s eerily close to a typical
Bertillon composition. The viewer is placed in the position of having
interrupted something intimate and sinister. Bertillon and Degas were
contemporaries. Although there is no evidence they met, a curator at
Paris’s Musee d’Orsay has said Degas’s
Interior betrays 'the scientific gaze of a Bertillon assistant at a crime scene.'”
~ S. Gorton
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-intimacy-of-crime-scene-photos-in-belle-epoque-paris?
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