The urn of Isadora Duncan (1877–1927) is one of the most famous here, no doubt not just because of her revolutionary dancing style but also in part because of the fascination with her unconventional and tragic life. Writers and artists were inspired by her, such John Cowper Powys's Élise Angel in After My Fashion (1980), or Antoine Bourdelle's sculptures.
Duncan married the deeply troubled Russian poet Sergueï Essénine – a man eighteen years her junior – although the marriage was very short-lived and a few years after his return to Russia he killed himself. Famously, Duncan was killed by strangulation from her scarf caught in a car wheel at Nice. She joined her two children killed in Paris in 1913 when the car they were in ran into the Seine.
Duncan married the deeply troubled Russian poet Sergueï Essénine – a man eighteen years her junior – although the marriage was very short-lived and a few years after his return to Russia he killed himself. Famously, Duncan was killed by strangulation from her scarf caught in a car wheel at Nice. She joined her two children killed in Paris in 1913 when the car they were in ran into the Seine.
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