Zola: Photographer by François Emile-Zola and Massin - review by Sonia Ashmore

Sonia Ashmore

Man on a Bicycle

Zola: Photographer

By

Collins 183pp £15
 

Emile Zola appears to have been a man of considerable energy. Besides the novels, plays, reviews and polemic, he ran two separate households, one for his wife Alexandrine, the other with his great love Jeanne Rozerot and their two children. He designed extensions to his official country residence at Medan, and to get from one house to the other in time for afternoon tea with the children, he bicycled. In 1894 Zola took up photography and practised it avidly until his accidental death eight years later. Not a man to do things by halves, Zola eventually bought ten cameras, with their tripods, cases and lenses, and had three dark rooms installed in his houses. ‘Every man should have a hobby’, he told a reporter, ‘and I confess to an extreme passion for mine.’

Zola: Photographer is a testament to his skill with the camera and to his abundant interest in the world around him. It is also a marvellous album of life in and around fin de siècle Paris.

The book’s text has been compiled by Zola’s grandson François Emile-Zola, and the pictures selected

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