Greig Leach

Contemporary figurative art created with oilsticks on paper, watercolors, stained glass and mixed media color based images of people, food, cycling and faith-based iconography

 
 
  • Home
  • Gallery
  • Cv/bio
  • Contact
  • Purchase Info
  • Links
  • Artist Statement
  • Figurative Works

  • Still Lifes and Food

  • Commissioned Artwork

  • Stained Glass

  • MIxed Media

  • Garden Paintings

  • Criterium du Dauphine

  • Tour Down Under

  • Tour de France Femmes 2024

  • Tour de France 2024

  • Spiritual Works

  • Spring Classics

  • Paris 2024 Olympics

  • Zurich 2024 UCI Worlds

  • Limited Edition Prints

  • Painting a Day

  • Acrylic Paintings

  • Tour de France & Tour de France Femmes 2023

  • Tour de France & Tour de France Femmes 2022

  • Tour de France 2016

  • 100th Giro d'Italia

  • Tour de France 2015

  • Summer Olympics

  • Three Dimensional Painting

  • Giro d Italia

  • Tour de France 2014

  • Tour of Britain

  • Dauphine 2014

  • Cycling Art Books

  • Doha 2016 UCI Road World Championships

  • Richmond 2015 UCI World Road Championship

  • Other Cycling Art

  • Professional Women's Cycling

  • Tour of California

  • Vuelta 2017

  • Bergen 2017 UCI Road World Championships

  • 101st Giro d'Italia

  • Tour de France 2018

  • Tour de France 2019

  • Yorkshire 2019

  • Paris Nice

  • 2020 Bike Racing Revised Season

  • Tour de France 2020

  • Spring Classics 2021

  • 2021 Tour de France

  • 2020 Summer Olympics

  • Flanders 2021

  • Winter Olympics 2022

  • Wollongong 2022, UCI Road World Championships

  • Vuelta a Espana 23

  • Cyclo-Cross

view all images

No, Honestly TDF19-110

The 19th stage of the Tour was neutralized as the peloton sped down the back side of the Col de l'Iseran. It took awhile for the message to get through to the men on the road. Apparently, Simon Yates (Mitchelton-Scott) knew ahead of Egan Bernal (Ineos). It seemed that the young Colombian was skeptical of what the Brit was telling him. Shortly after I painted this, you could see Bernal on his radio getting the news. What they couldn't see was that there was a very bad hail storm in the valley before the final climb of the day. From aerial shots, snow plows and front loaders were desperately trying to clear the road, but the water run off was way too dangerous. They could have resumed the race at the foot of the final climb, but getting everyone to that point may have proved impossible. Instead, since the stage was to be a mountain top finish anyway, they decided to make the finish at the top of the mountain they had just surrmounted.
 

 

[#]Join Email List
Powered by artspan.com
Artist Websites