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Village Squire, 1976-01, Page 18Ron's drawings are an intricate working of pencil, painstakingly put together. While both enjoy country life, it can have its problems for artists. Slow mail delivery, for instance, recently meant they missed a, chance to take part in two important exhibitions because the notices didn't arrive until too late. Getting materials can also be a challenge but one Bev is looking forward to. Artists, she says, tend to work with what they have at hand and so lack of ready access• to the usual materials may force them into experimentation with things around them. Bev is already familiar with experimenta- tion. Upset by the high cost of framing works of art, she experimented with silk screened prints on pexi-glass that could be hung in front of a light source. The prints were built up in layers of glass, each one printed with a different portion of the picture. The result was a three-dimensional effect. The result was also expensive. The cost of pexi-glass skyrocketed and shot down the plan to produce works several feet square. Still remaining, however, are small works four inches by four inches with tiny 'scenes in dream-like atmosphere. Experimentation comes naturally to Bev. Her training actually isn't in art, but in medical research. She came from a family, she recalls, where everyone was expected to take a course in a field that would provide a good living. So she took a lab technology course and only later began to drift more toward art. She took night courses and other short -courses but actually has no formal art training. She began to take art seriously in 1970 when she worked late at night on art and kept up with the lab job during the daytime. About 1972 she reduced her lab work to part-time and spending the rest of the time on art. She got lucky, she recalls, and landed a job at Centennial College in Scarboro teaching art. She had taken courses there and happened to be there when they needed a teacher and was recommended for the job by a former teacher. "You have to learn a lot more when you teach a subject," she says of that teaching experience. Always knowing that students LADIES & GIRLS SWEATERS, BLOUSES, DRESSES & CARCOATS VILLAGE SQUIRE/JANUARY 1976, 17