Be it a Jaguar D-type sports-racer roaring through the mist along the Mulsanne or a Sunderland seaplane dropping depth charges in evening light over the ocean, Roy Nockolds was a master of capturing great machines in their element.
His commercial paintings in oils and acrylics were often very photo-realist, but Nockolds on occasion adopted a more Impressionist style, which resulted in some of his finest works.
A spectacular study of his hero, Richard Seaman, drifting a Mercedes-Benz W154 en route to winning the 1938 German Grand Prix is regarded as one of the greatest motorsport paintings.
Born in 1911 in Croydon, Nockolds was the youngest of seven children.
His artistic genes came from his mother, who was related to the Flemish master Pieter van der Heyden, and from an early age drawing and painting were his main passion.
But it was a trip to Brooklands in 1924 that really captured his imagination, and during his teens this self-taught talent was already having his illustrations published in The Light Car.