[3] She then attended Birmingham College of Art and Crafts to study painting,[3] and the Royal Academy Schools in London.
[4] She met her husband, the painter David Prentice,[1] at Birmingham College of Art and Crafts.
[3] They lived in Northamptonshire[4] and, from 1990,[4] Malvern Wells, and generally avoided exhibiting together.
[5] Her work is in public collections, including those of the Victoria & Albert Museum[6] and the Shipley Art Gallery.
[3] The University has referred to her "lifelong commitment to a radical feminist enquiry as an alternative approach to the avant-garde art historical canon".