TIM PAGE – LIMITED EDITION PRINTS
Don’t miss out – stock is very limited!
This is a one time only print run to support Aussie veterans suffering from mental illnesses like PTSD, anxiety and depression.
Each print is a high quality A1 or A2 unique print, signed and with a written description of the image by the original photographer Tim Page. Each includes a certificate of authenticity, includes free shipping and will be delivered to you within 7 working days. This is one of the only signed print series Tim Page has ever done and sadly Tim passed away in August 2022.
Hurry, these prints are only available while our limited stocks last.
Hippy Umbrella - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 18 - only 17 left!
A 9th Division trooper manning the .50 Cal MG atop an APC during the fighting to control the ‘Y’ bridge in the 8th District of Saigon during the Mini-Tet offensive of May ’68.
Duc Co Ambush - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 18 - only 11 left!
Resupply and dust off choppers arrive at ambushed convoy of ARVN Marines & Airborne to relieve the besieged Special Forces camp at Duc Co, astride Rte 19 on the Cambodian border in the Central Highlands, July ‘65
Jeeps - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 18 - only 17 left!
The relief and resupply of the besieged Special Forces camp astride the Cambodian border on Rte 19. The U.S. 25th Division eventually lifted the siege by a N.V.A. regiment. A precursor to the infamous Ia Drang battle in November ’65.
Nam Choppers 6 - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 16 - only 10 left!
A tourist leaves his message at the Cu Chi tunnel museum, 60kms west of Saigon. This display, left over US Huey chopper was shot when I accompanied Bryan Adams on his tour to Vietnam in 1994.
Nam Choppers 12 - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 16 - only 14 left!
173rd Airborne land in a hot L.Z. in War Zone D, 80 kms north west of Saigon. Operation Silver City was a massive, multi-regiment move to annihilate a North Vietnamese Army regiment in the Ho Bo Woods, March ’66.
Nam Choppers 14 - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 19 - only 18 left!
A door gunner on an RAAF Hey flying over the Rung Sat, the estuary of the Saigon River. Australian forces controlled this zone from Vung Tau and Nui Dat on the estuary. Shot taken during Operation Hayman Island, 1966
Plain De Joncs ‘65 - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 9 - only 6 left!
U.S. Army helicopters carry the lead company of ARVN 33rd Rangers into the V.C. stronghold of the Plains des Joncs (Plain of Reeds) on the south west fringe of the Parrots Beak 60 miles west of Saigon, July 1965
6RAR Assaulting - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 18 - only 13 left!
An early morning, dawn assault by 1st RAR into the Long Green. Moving into areas around the Nui Dat base that the enemy contested, 1965
ARVN Rangers #1 - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 18 - only 13 left!
U.S. army helicopters bring the second company of ARVN 33rd Rangers into the L.Z. in the Plains des Joncs (Plain of Reeds) on the S.W. edge of the Parrots Beak, 65 miles west of Saigon, July ’65.
ARVN Rangers #2 - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 17 - only 15 left!
U.S. army helicopters bring the second company of ARVN 33rd Rangers into the L.Z. in the Plains des Joncs (Plain of Reeds) on the S.W. edge of the Parrots Beak, 65 miles west of Saigon, July ’65.
Helicopter Extraction - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 18 - only 15 left!
Wounded 173rd Airborne trooper lifted out of the dense jungle in the Ho Bo Woods (War Zone D). The 173rd came into contact with a regiment of NVA (North Vietnamese Army) during Operation Silver City which also involved the 1st Division RAR (Royal Australian Regiment) and 25th Division, lasting over 3 weeks during March ’66.
Sean Flynn - A2 Print
$850.00
Sold out!
Sean Flynn in the window of the flat on Tu Do Street, downtown Saigon opposite Brodards and once upon a time above the Bluebird Bar, half a block from the Caravelle.
25TH DIV M48 - A2 Print
$850.00
1 of 18 - only 15 left!
A M48 tank driver from the 25th Division during a road sweep up Rte 14 north of Tay Ninh, September 1968
Plain De Joncs ‘65 - A1 Print
$1,050.00
1 of 5 - only 4 left!
U.S. Army helicopters carry the lead company of ARVN 33rd Rangers into the V.C. stronghold of the Plains des Joncs (Plain of Reeds) on the south west fringe of the Parrots Beak 60 miles west of Saigon, July 1965
ARVN Rangers #1 - A1 Print
$1,050.00
1 of 5 - only 2 left!
U.S. army helicopters bring the second company of ARVN 33rd Rangers into the L.Z. in the Plains des Joncs (Plain of Reeds) on the S.W. edge of the Parrots Beak, 65 miles west of Saigon, July ’65.
Hippy Umbrella - A1 Print
$1,050.00
Sold out!
A 9th Division trooper manning the .50 Cal MG atop an APC during the fighting to control the ‘Y’ bridge in the 8th District of Saigon during the Mini-Tet offensive of May ’68.
Jeeps - A1 Print
$1,050.00
1 of 5 - only 3 left!
The relief and resupply of the besieged Special Forces camp astride the Cambodian border on Rte 19. The U.S. 25th Division eventually lifted the siege by a N.V.A. regiment. A precursor to the infamous Ia Drang battle in November ’65.
Helicopter Extraction - A1 Print
$1,050.00
1 of 5 - only 5 left!
Wounded 173rd Airborne trooper lifted out of the dense jungle in the Ho Bo Woods (War Zone D). The 173rd came into contact with a regiment of NVA (North Vietnamese Army) during Operation Silver City which also involved the 1st Division RAR (Royal Australian Regiment) and 25th Division, lasting over 3 weeks during March ’66.
About Tim Page
Tim Page left England at 17 to travel across Europe, the Middle East and to India and Nepal. He found himself in Laos at the time of the civil war and ended up working as a stringer for United Press International. From there he moved on to Saigon where he covered the Vietnam War for the next five years working largely on assignment for TIME-LIFE, UPI, PARIS MATCH and ASSOCIATED PRESS. He also found time to cover the Six Day War in the Middle East in 1967. The role of war-photographer suited Page’s craving for danger and excitement. He became an iconic photographer of the Vietnam War and his pictures were the visual inspiration for many films of the period. The photojournalist in ‘Apocalypse Now’, played by Dennis Hopper was based on Page.
The Vietnam War was the first and last war where there was no censorship, the military actively encouraged press involvement and Page went everywhere, covering everything. He was wounded four times, once by ‘friendly fire’ and the last time was when he jumped out of a helicopter to help load the wounded and the person in front of him stepped on a landmine. He was pronounced DOA at the hospital. He required extensive neuro-surgery and spent most of the seventies in recovery.
It was while he was recovering in hospital in spring 1970 that he learnt that his best friend, house mate and fellow photographer Sean Flynn, son of Hollywood actor Errol, had gone missing in Cambodia. Throughout the 70’s and 80’s Page’s mission was to discover the fate and final resting place of his friend and to erect a memorial to all those in the media that were either killed or went missing in the war. This led him to found the IndoChina Media Memorial Foundation and was the genesis for the book ‘REQUIEM’. With his friend Horst Faas, photo editor for Associated Press and double Pulitzer Prize winner, they co-edited the book and commemorated the work of all the dead and the missing, from all nations, who were lost in the thirty-year struggle for liberation. REQUIEM the exhibition is now on permanent display at the War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City.
Tim Page is the subject of many documentaries, two films and the author of ten books. He spent 5 months in 2009 as the Photographic Peace Ambassador for the UN in Afghanistan and is the recipient of many awards. He was recently named one of the ‘100 Most Influential Photographers Of All Time’. His interest and passion now is covering the aftermath of war and bringing the world’s attention to the plight of the innocent victims – the bystanders. He returns regularly to Viet Nam and Cambodia to run photo workshops, do assignments and to photograph the mines – and the maimed that are still being injured 30 years on and the still, devastating effects of Agent Orange. Since arriving in Australia Tim has also covered East Timor and The Solomon Islands. Tim sadly passed away in August 2022.