The abstract artist Roger Hilton had a special relationship with the west of Cornwall, where he settled towards the end of his life.
Now the Newlyn Art Gallery is holding a retrospective of his art to mark the centenary of his birth.
The paintings, selected by Roger's widow Rose from private collections across Britain, were mainly created during the artist's time in Cornwall.
There are oil paintings, late gouaches and drawings, as well as previously unseen sketchbooks, photographs, letters and a sound recording of Roger made in 1974, the year before he died.
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The exhibition focuses will be on the painter's work from the late 1950s, when he began to spend significant amounts of time in Cornwall.
He first took a studio in St Ives, then one overlooking Newlyn harbour for three summers, before settling permanently in Botallack near St Just in 1965.
He was a regular exhibitor at Newlyn Art Gallery, and lived for a while with the curator Michael Canney and his wife Madeleine.
The exhibition, with its accompanying talks, celebrates Roger's connection with the gallery and the area.
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