HMG STUDIO

HORST MARIA GUILHAUMAN

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  • CBC NEWS

    Kitchener-Waterloo

    'A different kind of guy': New film tells tale of the Bridgeport General

    Film about area’s first crossing guard premieres Thursday in Waterloo

    CBC News · Posted: Jan 11, 2018 12:40 PM EST | Last Updated: January 11, 2018

     

     

    This photo shows Frank Groff, the Bridgeport General, holding his handmade stop sign. He used to help children cross the busy intersection at Lancaster Street and Bridge Street. (KW Record Negative Collection/Provided by Rob Ring)

     

    There was always a poster of a man holding a stop sign in Rob Ring's basement when he was growing up.

     

    "It was just this picture of this ratty looking old guy with a stop sign and there was some text written beside him on the print, but as a child I never read it," Ring said.

     

    A few years ago, when his dad was downsizing, he asked Ring if he'd like the print. Ring said yes and it sent him down the path to creating Care for the Child: The Story of the Bridgeport General, a film which premieres Thursday night at the Princess Cinemas in Waterloo.

     

    The video link can be viewed here: https://vimeo.com/154192812

     

    For those unfamiliar with the story, Frank Groff was the Bridgeport General — a self-appointed crossing guard at the corner of Lancaster Street and Bridge Street, now a roundabout — in the 1960s in what was then the Village of Bridgeport. It later became part of the City of Kitchener.

     

    'A different kind of guy'

    "To put it gently, he was a different kind of guy," Ring described Groff, who was known to wear the same clothes year-round.

     

    Decades ago, Groff saw the busy intersection and became worried about the safety of children who crossed there. So he made his own stop sign and began to help the children cross, stopping vehicles on the road.

     

    When Kitchener annexed Bridgeport, city staff asked Groff to stop his work. But the community revolted, protesting with chants of "we want our general."

     

    Not long after, he was back on the job.

     

     

    Rob Ring is the writer and director of Care for the Child: The Story of the Bridgeport General. It tells the story of Frank Groff, who made himself a crossing guard at a busy intersection in the Village of Bridgeport — now Kitchener — in the 1960s. (Kate Bueckert/CBC)

    Ring called Groff's story a universal one — you don't need to be from Kitchener or Waterloo to enjoy learning more about him.

     

    "More than anything, I think it's a story about tolerance," Ring said.

     

    "You have this guy who, a lot of the community appreciated him and understood what he was doing and thought that was great, but he was a different kind of person and he did things his own way and not everyone thought that was a good thing."

     

    The film premiere and two other screenings this month are already sold out. A fourth screening will be held Feb. 10.

     

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    For the CBC news article: CLICK HERE

  • EGANVILLE LEADER NEWSPAPER

     Horst Maria Guilhauman unveiled his Horses of the Apocalypse painting at his studio on the Opeongo Road. The vivid colours and detailed imagery characteristic of his work depict the themes of Revelation in the Bible.                     OPEONGO– At 85, Horst Maria Guilhauman seems almost ageless sporting his trim physique, youthful enthusiasm and trademark ponytail, but he is very conscious of this milestone birthday and has painted a culminating masterpiece to mark this event and perhaps serve as a reminder to others of the fragility of life and the judgment at the end. “These are the horses of the Apocalypse,” he said after unveiling his latest masterpiece. “There is a lot of information in Revelation about the Apocalypse and this has been on my mind for some time.” Deeply religious and philosophical, Mr. Guilhauman said at one time he considered a religious calling. “But I thought I would be a better painter than preacher,” he said with a smile. “I am a visual preacher.” However, the draw to the written word is still there and he has not only painted his vision of the horses of the Apocalypse but written about it as well. His words describing the painting are follows: “What is he apocalypse? A fairy tale or dusty Biblical prophecies of the ancient past? “Of a past, in which God inspired the Apostle John to discuss, what is commonly called ‘The four Horsemen of the Apocalypse’, riding on red, black, white, grizzled and bay horses. They are to gallop right into our immediate future with an impact far beyond the present day occurrences of religious deception, war, famine and pestilence; symbolizing an end time culmination of the most devastating woes endured by mankind. “From an artist’s perspective, I am more in favour of an apocalyptic divine inspired fairy tale.” “Influenced by Albrecht Durer, 16th century German painter, whose vivid realistic renderings of the apocalypse, inspired my early artistic fantasies at age 15 to draw and ride the horses right out of my sketch book. Adding to it my undying love for the Brother Grimm’s fairy tales, and you have me, seven decades later, painting the last chapter of the prophetic sage – unleashing ‘The Horses of the Apocalypse’.” Born in Germany, he was captivated by images of the Apocalypse as a young man and began sketching his vision. “I still have a lot of sketches from that time in 1952,” he said. While his original sketches are different from the imagery he used with the painting he finished in his 80s, the flowing movement of the horses is still there. Painting in his studio on the Opeongo Road at Lake Clear he spent much of the winter working on this piece. The end result shows the horses of the apocalypse charging out at the viewer, as well as a middle horse. “I started with the four horses,” he said. “I did not want the four horses with riders.” The four horses at the bottom of the canvas were the first image he went with and then the painting grew from there with a cross and several stars of David around the top symbolizing the disciples of Christ. The work took several months to complete and was finished right around his birthday in May. The completion date was shortly after his birthday and he considers this a significant achievement for his 85th year. “I worked on this for four and a half months,” he said. “It is a very personal work. I talked to God to show me what to do next because I had vague ideas of how it should be.” The description of the horses and the Apocalypse has a white horse and the avenging Christ, so Mr. Guilhauman incorporated that with his horses as the horse in the middle. There is also the inscription at the top INRI which is referenced in the Bible as the King of the Jews and the reminder from the artist of Jesus of Nazareth being the king. As in anything the artist creates, much thought and symbolism go into it.  The colours – vivid hues – go back into blackness. “And I knew I had to have red and mauve tones in it,” he said.  The artist looks at a self portrait he did from a photograph of himself as a younger man.Pertinent To 2021 He feels the Apocalypse is very pertinent to our times because of the issues of 2021. Having lived through war in Europe as a child and the aftermath and being an immigrant to Canada, he has experienced a lot of challenging things, but he feels the current climate is much worse. “This is what is happening today,” he said. “The destruction internationally. We hear about it and we see it.” The images of the Apocalypse and end times have followed him for 70 years and he always knew he would have to create this painting. To be able to complete it has been incredibly significant for him. “Off and on I thought I would have to paint this,” he said. “I wanted to do it 10 years ago when I turned 75 but the time was not right.” Coming to 2021, the time was right in many ways. Link to Eganville Leader story:  CLICK HERE  

  • ART EXHIBITION - COLLINGWOOD, ONTARIO