Emile Zola photographed... | XIXe | Photographies Emile Zola (225 photos)
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Emile Zola (French Emile Zola; April 2, 1840, Paris - September 29, 1902, ibid.) - French writer. One of the most significant representatives of realism of the second half of the 19th century - the leader and theoretician of the so-called naturalistic movement, Zola stood at the center of the literary life of France in the last thirty years of the 19th century and was associated with the largest writers of that time ("Lunches of Five" (1874) - with the participation of Gustave Flaubert, Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev, Alphonse Daudet and Edmond Goncourt, “Evenings of Médan” (1880) - a famous collection that included works by Zola himself, Joris Karl Huysmans, Guy de Maupassant and a number of minor naturalists, such as Henri Cear, Léon Ennick and Paul Alexis) .
"... he never tired of capturing his beloved in her daily activities - in the photographs she embroiders, makes bouquets, reads a book, plays the mandolin, her hair is loose or covered with a hat with a veil, with a boa around her neck. The daughter and son also often pose in front of the camera. He put together an entire album entitled “Denise and Jacques. A true story, the work of Emile Zola" and ordered a luxurious binding for it. In order to practice photography, he set up a workshop at his home and, for convenience’s sake, another similar one at home Jeanne..."
From the book "Emile Zola".
Henri Troyat's fascinating biographical novel reflects not only the writer's painful creative search, but also his personal experiences. The fate of the great novelist, full of drama and contradictions, unfolds before the readers day after day.