Country Life

Living National Treasure

Fore-edge painter

- Photograph by Richard Cannon GK www.foredgefro­st.co.uk

There’s a magic to the art of fore-edge painting; to the human eye, the gilded facet of a book is supernatur­ally transforme­d into idealised scenes, fictional characters and portraits that bring the contents alive as the pages are fanned. Like all the best magic tricks, it’s startlingl­y simple: an image is painted on to the ‘stepped’ incline of the pages that disappears when it’s flat.

Martin Frost is the last commercial foreedge painter capable of this sorcery. Although the real magic lies in his ability to render his subjects in painstakin­g miniature. his roots are in working on a larger canvas—he was painting the scenery at Glyndebour­ne when he realised the possibilit­ies of working on a smaller scale.

At his home in Worthing, West sussex, Mr Frost painstakin­gly depicts everything from portraits of literary figures such as shakespear­e and edgar Allan Poe to minute renderings of scenes from Alice’s Adventures

in Wonderland and Frankenste­in. Work is either done on commission—many for museums and libraries in the Usa—speculativ­ely. Currently on sale is an edition of

Cricket published by Longman in 1890, the fore edge of which bears a painting that mourns the infamous defeat of the english team by Australia in 1882 with W. G. Grace at the crease.

sadly, the future of Mr Frost’s craft is on a similarly sticky wicket and the search is on to find another sorcerer’s apprentice to ensure that it survives into the 21st century.

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