|
Zola Collection on Show to Mark French Writer's Death
Norwood
is to host a major exhibition to
mark the centenary of the death of the great French writer Emile Zola.
The
event is being staged by the Norwood
Society, in collaboration with
the Emile Zola Society, and will be
held at the Phoenix Centre in Westow
Street, Upper Norwood, from 10am-5pm
on Saturday, November 9.
A
young lady cycles along Westow Hill in 1899 with
one of the Crystal Palace water towers in the distance. |
On
display will be a unique collection
of old photographs of Norwood, Crystal
Palace and the surrounding area
taken by Zola during his second visit
to London in 1898-99.
Zola
was forced to seek exile in England
at this time following his involvement
in the Dreyfus affair. This arose following false charges of treason
being made in 1897 against Captain Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish French army
officer. Dreyfus was subsequently found guilty and sentenced to
life imprisonment on Devil's Island,
the French penal colony.
Zola
was outraged by the considerable
injustice surrounding the case and
on January 13, 1898 he wrote a letter
headed "J'accuse", which was widely
published in the French press.
In
his letter Zola accused the French
authorities of a flagrant miscarriage
of justice. The letter drew considerable
criticism and to avoid the
backlash which erupted in the months following its publication, Zola
decided to move to England.
He
arrived on July 19, 1898 and after a
brief stay at Wimbledon and Weybridge,
he came to Norwood where he booked into the Queen's Hotel (now known
as the Quality Hotel) in Church
Road, Upper Norwood, on October 15, 1898.
The
area was well known to him from
his previous visit to London in 1893
when he had visited the nearby Crystal Palace.
Whilst
staying at the Queen's Hotel, Emile
turned to his favourite hobby of
photography to help pass the time. |
He
had became an enthusiastic amateur
photographer 10 years earlier when
his friend Victor Buillard introduced
him to the activity in 1888 during a six week holiday in Royan.
During
the eight months Zola was residing
in Norwood he was often to be
seen in the neighbourhood with his
camera taking pictures of the local surroundings.
He
took over a hundred photographs
in and around Norwood and the
Crystal Palace, many of which are
to be featured in the exhibition.
A
fascinating collection of these views
have also been published by the
Norwood Society in their book Emile Zola Photographer in Norwood,
South London, 1898 -1899.
This
will
be on sale at the exhibition or can
be purchased at a cost of £8.99 including
postage and packing from The
Norwood Society, 63 Bradley Road,
London SE19 3NT.
Home Return
to Press Page
|