Art News South Africa

A Page in time

A new book on Port Elizabeth artist Frederick (Fred) Hutchinson Page (1902 - 1984) has been published. Titled The Ringmaster of the Imagination it is an inside view on the life and journey of the artist. Page is considered to be one of South Africa's foremost surrealist painters.
A Page in time

The book is written by Eastern Cape art biographer Jeanne Wright who was commissioned by Page's attorney and friend Cecil Kerbel. It is claimed to be the first comprehensive compilation of the artist's work. Much of the work portrayed in the book has been drawn from private collections and therefore is revealed for the first time. Previously, the only work that has been available to the public is held in some national galleries and PE's Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Art Museum, which holds all his memorabilia as well as a major collection of his work.

Cecil Kerbel, a lifetime friend and the person who funded the project says, "This biography is the realisation of a lifelong ambition for me. I am delighted that at long last, Fred Page is receiving the recognition that he deserves." Cecil and Fred met in his early 20s. Cecil was fascinated by Fred's art and they developed a close friendship. "This friendship opened up another side of life for me," says Cecil.

Page lived and worked for most of his life in one of the oldest parts of the Port Elizabeth called Central which is above Port Elizabeth's harbour. Using the buildings as a backdrop to a range of characters and narratives, he has documented with considerable accuracy, areas of the city's architecture that reflect a specific time within the city's history. Reclusive by nature, Page did not receive much publicity during his lifetime.

A Page in time

His subject matter was obscure and unfashionable for many years and did not hold much appeal for the general public. However, his output has subsequently been recognised as an important and unique reflection of not only the South African city he lived in but also of an extraordinarily fertile and idiosyncratic imagination at work.

"Fred Page is an artist who has come in from under the radar to surprise me, as an author, with the range and diversity of his material. He was uniquely South African and his passion for the city he chose to live in, revealed not only the imaginative world of his creative life as a painter, but also the poetic and fantastical side of life in Port Elizabeth as he perceived it," says Jeanne Wright.

The book is produced and printed entirely in Port Elizabeth, and is available in a soft cover edition and has 300 works fully illustrated in colour accompanied by an explanatory text. It is available in leading book stores.

For more information go to www.fredpage.co.za.

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