
Adrian Rigby
Royal Procession, Westward and Brittania, 32x44
Navajoe and Britannia Brent Reef Challenge Cup, 40x60
Riding the Spray, 8x25
Grace and Speed, 24x30
Evening Waters, 23.5x33
Shamrock and Columbia, America's Cup 1899, 24x30
Tuesday Blues, 36x48
Nantucket Summer, 24x36
America and Beatrice Race Past Osborne House 22 August, 1851, 24x20
Middle Beach Newport, 24x36
Neck and Neck, 20x24
The Perfect Spot, 24x36
Columbia and Constitution Passing Castle Hill 1899, 40x60
Endeavor and Rainbow, 16x20
Lulworth, 20x2
Clearing Away, Westward and Meteor IV, 20x24
Sandy Saturday, 40x60
Vigilant and Valkyrie II, America's Cup 1893, 24x30
Yankee and Weetamoe at Castle Hill, 24x36
The Closest Battle, Endeavor and Rainbow, Americas Cup, 1934, 40x60
Castle Hill With Lighthouse, 40x60
Distant View, 40x60
Adrian Rigby is universally recognized as a world’s top award winning artist. Adrian’s art includes marine art, maritime art, aviation art and wildlife art. This artist like so many other painters travel the world in search of subject matter. Using reference as the sea in different locales, or animals in their natural habitat. As for aviation art he has taken many many photos to study for accuracy of the intended subject.
Rigby was born in Chorley Lancashire England and studied at Blackpool College of Art 1979-1982. He was so good as a student that upon graduation he became the teacher where he taught 1982-1985.
His initial art was illustration for books where as a single man he made a nice living for himself. Adrian then discovered that he was a very talented artist using the medium of gouache which is a heavier type of water color. His career as an artist took off when he acquired an agent and signed up with Solomon and Whitehead a major British publisher to sell prints from his original artwork. By the late nineties he was already well known in the UK. By shear luck he met an American in 1999 who became his manager, the manager did for him in the USA what his agent in the UK did for him.
There was more for him to learn however as his manager mentioned that the American market was not as interested in watercolors/gouache for two reasons, one prestige and two sunlight, (a lot of sunlight fades watercolors and gouache). There is a lot more sunlight in the USA than the UK so he self taught himself as many good artists do, to work in both acrylic and oils. Today Adrian works almost exclusively in oils on both sides of the Atlantic.
As a single man Adrian worked both as a hobby and for a living in three studios located in the UK, Florida and Spain. With time constraints and now with a wife, two children and three dogs he now paints for the worldwide market only from his home in Lancashire County England.