Ontario Community Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 17 Oct 1993, p. 36

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Why spend more on new furniture. Save 30% on all fabrics and have your old furniture re-upholstered and look new again. For free shop at home service, pick-up and delivery phone anytime, 7 days a week. Your satisfaction is our joy. Celebrate the harvest with the most famous of German Festivals! @32353’5 OK To BER FES T 0 PORCELMN VENEERS 0 BONBING 0 RESHAWNG . BLEACHING ' SPACE CLOSURE ~ CROWNS G BIUDGES . BONE IMPLANTS 0 TEETH-STRAIGHTENENG 0 PARTIAL/FULL DENTURES ' ‘30 COSMETIC DENTISTRY ‘30 Bountiful Gourmet Foods and German Specialties from our kitchens will be the high- light of your fall menus. - Over 100 German products featured! - From our kitchens: Fleischkaese, veal, I mmzmmk. Umz._._m._.m< I O<mm m <m>mm 0:252. mXfimEmzom I I UmU_O>._.mU ._.O mxomrrmzoml Tel: (905) 270-5112 Huron Square Plaza 2500 Hurontario Street,~ Mississauga mee‘ssional all breed Dog 8: cat grooming Gift boutique Comg’Me health beauty care ryour special friend ENSO UPHOLSTERY 842-2778 0 Holiday makeovers ' No stress atmosphere . Flexible h0urs ' Open Sundays BEFORE BEFORE COMPUTERIZED COSMETIC IMAGING olgtoberfest and westfaeler sausages, German potato salad, saucrbraten, herbed liverwursts, smoked Kassler and much more! In-store tastings, etc. Hurry - Oktoberfest celebration ends Oct. 23 ‘Iliejjy Goodfellow: {One artist who loves a challenge etty Goodfellow is an origi- B nal. Her most recent art- works are big, bold and vibrant â€" featuring tumbling water, billowing wildflowers and mystic trees. Almost celebratory in tone, they speak volumes about the artist and her personal take on the universe.- “I’ve never been shy,” she declared during an interview last week in her light-filled, lakeshore home, and studio. “I love working large; bigger paintings, broader strokes, more color and variation.” So said the fiftysomething artist, teacher, stu- dent, wife, mother, grandmother, seamstress, sailor, set designer, cat AFTER AFTER WITHOUT BRACES 284 King E. jackson Square lover, and member of the Maycourt Club: Goodfellow is a long and lithe woman. She appeared at the door wearing a plaid shirt and blue jeans, socks with sandals and a big smile. A teacher for quite a number of years, she is currently a self-reliant student working on her OACs in preparation for university (in other words, she’s gone back to high school). She’s been married for 40 years to her accountant husband Grant (who said beanâ€"counters were boring?), has five grown children, nine grandchildren, and two slinky cats. Nothing much fazes her. As long as the paint holds out: “I love doing things,” the resourceful woman said. In order to carry on painting, she has done all manner of odd jobs from re-uphol- stering furniture to conducting bus tours. would add. 699 Guelfih Line Qakville 2410 Rkeshore Rd. W “As an artist, it is the ‘process’ I enjoy. It is the creating; the getting it together. When I’m working on something, I can paint for 16 or 18 hours a day. I’m happiest then.” 826 Queenston Rd W Betty Goodfellow: "I've never been shy." “It doesn’t get any better,” she M Hamilton WIN A TRIP FOR 2 TO GERMANY ' Germany \X/IN A JUNIOR MOUNTAIN BIKE [T'â€" Courtesy of Spegialities from Courtesy of 740 Upper James Centre Mall SPORT Her bold style, reminiscent of the Group of Seven or Vincent Van Gogh perhaps, is something of a departure for Goodfellow who has been painting “fairly high realism” for a number of years, under the influence of Robert Bateman and Alex Colville. “I decided it was time to let go and paint what I felt. Experiment more,” the artist explained. “Get off the wall a bit.” She has certainly done that. One of her newest pieces is a 16 foot high, three dimensional waterâ€" fall with lights. It’s extraordinary. Betty was born and raised in Toronto, for'the most part, in a fosâ€" ter home because her mother was ill. She married early, at age 18, anxious to gain a semblance of fam- ily life. With five children, she got her wish and more. It wasn’t until her youngest daughter Lisa was safely off to school, that she felt compelled to actively chase her des- tiny. “Then, when I was 15, I came across this Tom Thomson painting, West Wind. It was just a little picâ€" ture in a book, but I knew then â€" this was how painting should excite.” The seed was sewn. She did some library research on the Group of Seven and also discovered Van Gogh who was a source of inspira- tion. “It was time to put up or shut up,” the artist said wryly. Even as a girl, she’d known art was her forte. Hfifl BLOCK” “His paintings are so easy to I Increase your tax knowlege I obta'n a new skill I convenient timesand locations for More IIIII'IIIIhn 08!: (410) 081-8000 Ext. 102 OAKVILLE BURLINGTON, MILTON (See 'Artist‘ page 39) STARTING SOON (Photo by Peter McCusker)

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