Price began his formal training in art at the Leamington School of Art from 1947-48 and then studied at Leeds College of Art from 1948-50. In 1950 he moved to London and attended the Royal College of Art and three years later he won the gold medal for pottery design there. The National Academy of Design awarded him a Saltus gold medal in 1965, and in 1970 he won the Percy A. Leason Prize from the Allied Artists of America.
Price's work has been exhibited many times in England at the Royal Academy of Art, London, at Leeds Art Gallery and is in the permanent collection of the Leamington Art Gallery. In New York he has had numerous solo exhibitions at Kennedy Galleries since 1963 wher he has shown many landscapes of Long Island as well as several of the west coast and the south west. During his career, Price has pursued landscape painting and portraiture as well as designed china, textiles, and wallpaper. He designed a great deal of Commemorative Ware and Dinner Ware for Wedgewood from 1950 through the 1980s.