Figurative Works
2026 Tour de France & Tour de France Femmes
2025 Tour de France and Tour de France Femmes
Still Lifes and Food
Commissioned Artwork
Stained Glass
MIxed Media
Paris Roubaix 2026
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
Looking for Their Leader TdF26-3
As Movistar hit the first of the two final climbs, their team leader Cian Uijtdebroeks wasn't able to hold the wheels of his teammates. As his teammates realized they didn't have him with them, they looked back debating how long they should wait, or if he would recover in the final kilometers. The Spanish champion Raul Garcia Pierna waited as Jefferson Alveiro Cepeda wondered what he should do. It was decided to let Pablo Castrillo go on ahead to gain the best time possible for the team and the others would bring Uijtdebroeks to the line as fast as he could manage. After all, it is only the first stage of the Tour, there is plenty of time to regain lost time knowing full well that most anything gain happen over the next twenty stages.