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Raymond Leech (British painter, 1949)


Raymond Leech was born at Great Yarmouth in East Angila and spent his childhood by the seaside.
He was influenced to take up an artistic career by his father, who taught him to draw.
In particular, he was inspired by the work of the Newlyn School, the french impressionists, Edgar Degas (1834-1917), Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901).


Raymond Leech did take a course in fine art and graphics at a local college of art but considers himself mainly to be a self-taught artist.
He works in watercolour, oil and pastel, and his motivation as an artist is best illustrated by his affection for the figure-work of the Cornish Newlyn School of artists, which at the turn of the twentieth century included Stanhope Forbes and Dame Laura Knight.

He admires their work because it provided ‘a breath of fresh air’ and Raymond Leech believes that a successful painting is not just a picture, but one that captures the air around the subject and the atmosphere as well.


Raymond Leech is a Member of the Royal Society of Marine Artists and of a number of other artistic societies.
He won the Charles Pears Prize at the RSMA Exhibition at The Mall Galleries in 1986 and now exhibits regularly in London and East Anglia.
His work has been exhibited with the Royal Institute of Oil Painters and is now held in private collections throughout the United Kingdom, South Africa, America, Spain and Hong Kong.