FOR 40 years, Peter Miller ran Ken Spelman's Bookshop, on Micklegate, in York.

Now, he is completing a hattrick of exhibitions since retirement in 2012, at Partisan, Florencia Clifford and Hugo Hildyard's vibrant artisan café on the same side of the cobbled street.

Filling the café's upstairs walls with God's Own Country colour, Peter is exhibiting From Kilburn To Hawnby, his series of landscape oil paintings of North Yorkshire, until November 30.

"This is the third show I've had in the last few years, after Ken Spelman's Bookshop in 2014 and Scampston Hall, near Malton, in 2015," he says. "As with the first two, the paintings explore landscape, in this case North Yorkshire.

"The first one featured Eskdale to Scarborough; the second one, for Scampston Hall, focused on the Wolds, and what you notice is that Yorkshire is such a big county with these completely different landscapes.

"The pictures are representational and are painted in a modest spirit of connection with place, but as with all painting, colour, tone and composition increasingly have become the real subject of the pictures."

York Press:

Hay Bales and Field, near Felixkirk, Autumn 2020, by Peter Miller

Miller's tale behind his latest show begins on the Wolds. "I was approached by Florencia and Hugo to do an exhibition because they'd been out to a mutual friend, Una McCluskey's house, beyond Kilnwick Percy, with its fantastic view of the Vale of York," he recalls.

"Some years ago, I did a picture of that view for Una for her kitchen, and when Florencia and Hugo saw it, they said, 'gosh, who did that?'. I'd known them for a long time, and in fact they approached me before the pandemic, saying they'd love to host an exhibition of my workbut of course it then got put back."

Peter is an enthusiastic walker, blessed with a painter's appreciation of landscape. "I'd done a lot of walks between Hawnby and Kilburn before the first lockdown, getting out and about, and then, in between lockdowns, I was able to refresh my memory of certain landscape scenes," he says.

York Press:

The White Horse From Fields Near Kilburn, Summer 2020, by Peter Miller

"I then did the paintings in my studio based on studies and photographs: Kilburn to Hawnby is an area I know well because I go up to Shandy Hall in Coxwold, where I'm involved with the Laurence Sterne Trust, and I enjoyed doing the studies in different seasons, such as studies of the White Horse in spring, summer and autumn.

"Put together, the pictures form a tangible evocation of time spent in the wonderfully varied Yorkshire landscape."

Born in 1947, Peter grew up in Chiswick. "But when I was a boy, I lived with my grandparents for three years in Blackpool; my grandfather was a commercial artist there but loved the countryside and I used to go on sketching trips with him," he says.

"I learned the basics of paintings from this lovely old man, and that was my starting point. In fact I did think of going to art school, but I felt it would be limiting my options too much, so instead I studied history as a degree."

York Press:

Peter Miller at work in his studio

Peter first came to York in 1965, initially as an undergraduate at the then-new University of York, but like many since, he ended up staying, running Spelman's, mounting exhibitions there too, until the canvas and cloth called.

One long-standing artistic association has come in handy for the latest exhibition. "Many of the frames were given to me by my artist friend John Langton, who's now in his late-80s and no longer paints," reveals Peter. "I availed myself of them and then did the paintings to fit the frames! It ended up being the cheapest exhibition I've ever done!"

Peter Miller: From Kilburn To Hawnby, Landscape Paintings of North Yorkshire, on show at Partisan, Micklegate, York, until November 30. Opening hours: Monday to Friday, 9am to 3pm; Saturday and Sunday, 9am to 4pm.