Restored home reopened by relative

The great-niece of Jos Divis, Veronika Schmidtova, cuts the ribbon to formally open the...
The great-niece of Jos Divis, Veronika Schmidtova, cuts the ribbon to formally open the restoration of her relative's former home at Waiuta. PHOTO: BRENDON MCMAHON
The restored 100-year-old home of a remarkable pioneering photographer who documented West Coast mining life has been formally opened.

The $100,000 project undertaken by the Department of Conservation (Doc) has breathed new life into the home of Jos Divis who lived in the cottage from the 1920s until his death in 1967.

Members of Divis' family, including his great niece, travelled from the Czech Republic to formally cut the ribbon yesterday.

The celebration marked the culmination of a complex restoration by Doc over the past two years, which brought the fragile wooden structure back from the brink — amidst renewed interest in Divis' photographic legacy.

Born in 1885 in what is now the Czech Republic, he emigrated to the West Coast in 1909, first living in Blackball then following an itinerant life as a mine worker for several years before becoming a fixture of Waiuta.

There Divis worked in the large underground gold mine and documented the community in a startling record of the town which continues to lives on in his images.

As a keen amateur photographer, Divis, documented the mining workplace in often startling photography.

This often included the photographer himself posed within his photos as an early form of the "selfie" by deploying self timer technology of the day.

Divis was widely published in the national newspapers until the late 1930s.

He also documented the demise of Waiuta as a town when the mine suddenly closed in 1951. At the time it had been the largest underground gold mine of its kind in the South Island.

PHOTO: BRENDON MCMAHON
PHOTO: BRENDON MCMAHON
Divis' remarkable legacy of thousands of photographs is still being discovered amidst a resurgence of interest with three current exhibitions including an opening at the National Library in Wellington this week.

Divis' work is also contained within many hidden personal albums of families with Waiuta links.

 - LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

By Brendon McMahon

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