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Village Squire, 1978-09, Page 21ART From business in the city, to art in the country, Arie Van der Ende likes the switch Arie Van der Ende stands in the livingroom of the house he designed himself: Putting his feelings of the "better things in life" to practice. PG. 20. VILLAGE SQUIRE/SEPTEMBER 1978. A soft haze lies over the valley in the late summer afternoon. The wind rustles the ripened grass. It's quiet and peaceful in the Huron county countryside. Let the peacefulness of the landscape seep into you and it's almost impossible to imagine the hectic world of modern commerce that is engrossing the majority of the Canadian population at this time. It's a long way from business to this farm near Holmesville and Arie Van der Ende likes it that way. A few short years ago he was involved heavily in the business world, first as a secretary-treasufer and later as a director of a large London packaging firm doing millions of dollars a year in business. Five years ago he decided to give it all up, to go back to the first interest of his life: art. During those long years in business he'd painted a little on the side but most of his time was taken up by business. He doesn't think he could ever have gotten completely away from art. But being in business, he says, he felt very badly about not being able to give vent to the artistic part of himself. So he quit, to the amazement of those who knew him who thought he was crazy. He quit and moved with his family to property, they'd bought between Clinton and Goderich and decided to have a go at making a living from art. And now he says it's the best thing he ever did. His wife Glennis agrees. He's much easier to live with now, she says. The business side of his life today extends only to selling his paintings from his gallery behind the house on the farm. His life revolves not around big finance, but around his family, his art, his studio and his 130 -year-old house. Art has been a part of Arie's life since his childhood. He grew up just a few miles from The Hague, near the ocean and right across from a large park. The locale's beauty drew artists from all over the world at a rate of tvto or three a day. He was 15 when the Second World War ended and the freedom of the post war period came. That freedom brought a travel boom that brought people from all over the world. Arie would talk with the artists and watch them work and between the ages of 15 and 20 spent a lot of time in this atmosphere. He took private art lessons and painted himself. But he also got involved in the air cadet movement and was chosen to come to Canada for special training under the NATO agreements. Ten cadets from each country were chosen to come to Canada to train as pilots then were sent back to their own countries to train others. Despite the harsh winter weather in Canada, Arie liked Canada, particularly the vastness after the crowded conditions of Europe. He liked it for another reason: he met his future wife on that stay.