Kurt Cobain’s 1994 death still sparks debate. Suicide or murder? We break down the toxicology report, heroin level controversy, suicide note questions, and crime scene details — separating facts from conspiracy. #KurtCobain #Nirvana #TrueCrime #ConspiracyTheories #90sRock #UnsolvedMystery #KurtCobainDeath

"The View Toward the City," Torsten Jovinge, 1930.
Jovinge (1898-1936) was a Swedish Modernist painter who had a brief but influential career.
He called his style "Purism" and was seen to be influenced by Cubism, with his use of colorful shapes in his work. But rather than distorting his subjects, or playing with perspective, he represents in his own way. He breaks them down into shapes but still retains some shading and texture.
His works were popular in his home country and were an influence on Swedish Modernism. He did a number of works set in various parts of Europe. He began painting and developed his style in the 1920s, traveling in Paris and other areas, and staying mostly in Sweden and Denmark in the 30s.
In 1936, he decided to travel to Morocco to paint, and during a stopover in Seville he was found shot to death in his hotel room. Spanish authorities, at the time caught up in the Spanish Civil War, claimed it was suicide, but the general agreement is that it was murder for unknown reasons.
From a private collection.
#Art #TorstenJovinge #Purism #PostCubism #Modernism #SwedishArt #UnsolvedMystery

July 2, 1937: Amelia Earhart vanishes over the Pacific. Her final transmission: "We are on the line 157–337." 88 years later, the mystery persists. New expeditions may finally reveal what happened to aviation's greatest pioneer.
https://theurb.co/amelia-earhart-mystery
#AmeliaEarhart #AviationHistory #UnsolvedMystery #TrueStory #History #Mystery #Aviation #FemaleAviation #WomenInAviation #HistoricalMystery #LegendaryWomen #Pilot #FeministIcon #AviationMystery #WomenPilots #ColdCase
Explore the enduring mystery of Amelia Earhart's 1937 disappearance. Discover the crash-and-sink theory, Nikumaroro castaway hypothesis, Japanese capture claims, and ongoing expeditions to solve aviation's greatest enigma.
The Man With No Name: The Trapper's Enduring Mystery
Who was Canada's Mad Trapper? An autopsy revealed 'Albert Johnson' was an alias. He was well-groomed, had expensive gold dental work, and carried over $2,000 in cash — unusual for a northern trapper. Despite modern forensic analysis, his true identity and the reason for his violent defiance remain unknown. #Canada #MadTrapper #UnsolvedMystery #History 🇨🇦