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Obituary: Nigel Cameron, Hong Kong art critic and forthright advocate for a fledgling generation of artists

Known in his early career in Asia for books about China with photography by Brian Brake, Cameron once buttonholed Zhou Enlai, in French, to get a travel pass; in Hong Kong, he helped the art scene grow

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Nigel Cameron discusses contemporary art on show at the Hong Kong Arts Centre with guests in 1984. Photo: Robin Lam
Art consultant Nigel Cameron. Photo: Ricky Chung
Art consultant Nigel Cameron. Photo: Ricky Chung
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Nigel Cameron

14 March 1920 to 14 February 2017

Nigel Cameron, art critic for the South China Morning Post between 1972 and 1994, died peacefully at his home in Hong Kong’s Mid-Levels this week at the age of 96.

Born in Edinburgh, Cameron first visited Asia with the British Royal Navy, and after studies and work as a dentist, he and his then partner, New Zealand photographer Brian Brake, decided to leave Britain in 1956 to travel around the world and collaborate on magazine assignments.

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An early adventure was a trip to China in 1957. While in Beijing and having trouble getting permission to visit inland regions, Cameron heard that Zhou Enlai was hosting a reception at the Beijing Hotel and decided to gatecrash it. Striding up the hotel’s grand central staircase to the banqueting hall, he joined a queue of other guests and, upon meeting Zhou, greeted him in fluent French.

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