Roy Petley (born 3rd of April 1950), painted en plein air, which is a French expression meaning “in the open air,” to create his popular works that depict the wide expanse of English beaches and the gentle allure of Venetian landscapes. His works have been likened to those of John Constable, Edward Seago, and Campbell Mellon, British painters whose styles were influenced by impressionism at the Barbizon School. Beginning life in a children’s home, he became one of the first artists to open an art gallery in Cork Street, a prestigious street lined with art galleries in London’s Mayfair. His works are popularly collected by British royalty, including Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. In every work of art, Petley incorporates a play of light and shadows. As he moves from his natural medium of oil to watercolour or pastel to sanguine, there remains a certain youthful light emanates from his paintings. As a plein air painter, his works reflect his surroundings – from the quiet beaches of Norfolk and the picturesque parks of Paris, to his subtle nudes draped with sheets and sunlight. He captures the romanticism of days gone by, with nary a modern automobile or electrical appliance blemishing his canvas. Renowned British art critic, Brian Sewell, described Petley as “a painter who still paints, who brushes watercolour onto paper and oil paint onto canvas. A painter who even settles down to draw the nude from life – an absurdly old-fashioned discipline for an artist to pursue.”