Charles Adrien Prosper Caïez d'Épinay (13 July 1836 – 23 September 1914) was a French sculptor and caricaturist (under the name Nemo).
[2] His first success came in 1864, in London, where he presented a caricature of Napoleon III and Lord Palmerston walking arm-in-arm.
After many years of shuttling between London, Paris and Rome, he decided to settle in London and made connections among the English aristocracy, but remained close to people with Parisian connections as well; especially the group centered on the Comte de Chambord, composed mainly of those who had left France following the Paris Commune.
He returned to Paris for the Salon of 1874, where he displayed a sculpture of a nude female figure attempting to close a belt.
[4] Together, they were the parents of several children, including: He died at his home in Saint-Cyr-sur-Loire and is interred at the Cimetière du Montparnasse in Paris.