Prendergast taught part-time in a school for one year after leaving the Slade, and then studied for a
Master's degree at
Reading University with
Terry Frost and
Claude Rogers. There, he met
Len Tabner, a fellow student and landscape painter, who remained a close friend in later life. Prendergast and his wife moved to
Bethesda in 1969, a village near
Bangor and close to the
Penrhyn Quarry. He taught part-time at
Liverpool School of Art until 1974, then at a local school,
Ysgol Dyffryn Ogwen, and then at
Coleg Menai, but he concentrated more on developing as an artist. He specialised in paintings of the Penrhyn slate quarry, which he described as "the biggest man-made hole in Europe, like
Bruegel's
The Tower of Babel, but in reverse", and of
Snowdonia. A "50th Birthday Exhibition" was held at the
Boundary Gallery in London in 1996, and a retrospective of his works toured galleries in Wales in 2006, including the
Welsh Museum of Modern Art in
Machynlleth. ''The Painter's Quarry'', a collection of critical essays on his work, was also published in 2006; a television profile with the same title appeared on
BBC2. After suffering from poor health in 2006, he died suddenly on 14 January 2007 from a
heart attack while walking with his wife near his home in
Deiniolen, near
Caernarfon in
Gwynedd. Following his death he had two major tribute exhibitions at
Martin Tinney Gallery, Cardiff (2014) and
Oriel Tegfryn, Menai Bridge (2013). In 2013
Richard Cork's biography of the artist,
The Art of Peter Pendergast, was published by Lund Humphries, with an introductory essay by Prendergast's old friend, Mike Knowles. ==References==