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Village Squire, 1973-06, Page 8This gallery just needs people Guenther Heim m ith some of his paintings. Wingham, has always been an unusual town. What other town can you name that has a population of 3000 persons, a radio station and a television station? What other town can you think of of similar size that has a professional art gallery? Well, technically, the art gallery isn't in Wingham, it's a mile or so out of town to the north and east. But the gallery is real, and it's professional. You'll find no big pillars of stone holding up vast edifaces at this gallery if you drive up Highway 4 north of Wingham and take the first concession right. The Heim Gallery is a modest building. In fact the owner, Guenther Heim says the building is a temporary one and if people show interest, a permanent building will be built in a few years. But for those interested in art, the important part of the building is inside where the works of 11 different Ontario artists are on display every day. All are professionals. They range from Susan Bell, a Goderich native who sculpts to painters Tony Lee, an:instru- ctor at Fanshawe college; Bruce Smith, an instructor at Georgian college; Ken Hansen from Weston who does beautiful watercolours; Tilda Peterson of London; Ken Jackson who works for CFPL London; Doris Murray of London; Dwayne Fenwick of Owen Sound; Bonnie Steinman of Wroxeter and Mike Eush head of the graphic arts department at Fanshawe college. And of course, the works of Guenther Heim himself. The gallery is unique in many ways. It Ls a commercial gallery in that the paintings on display are for sale. Yet, Mr. Heim wants to run the gallery Hke a public gallery with the public welcome, indeed urged to come. 8 In the year and a half the gallery has been open, attendance has not been high. Some weekends five or six people mill come. Some weeks none will come. Sometimes there may be 25 or 30 people present. "One of the problems with a gallery is that as soon as you call something an art gallery people get frightened. What we're trying to do is to make this a place where people can walk in and feel comfortable. We're not selling people. Sure we'd like people to buy, but that's not the point. The point is that it's here and feel free to drop in. It's their gallery, it's open for them. "I'd like," he says, "to eliminate the stigma that's been attached to the public galleries, you know, the high brow stuff. This is for the people to come in and look around. You don't have to know anything about art to appreciate art. "Some people will enjoy some work. Not all people will enjoy all the work here. That's not the point. "If something turns someone on so much they'd like to buy it, that's the reward we get; not just the financial reward but the reward of knowing that our work is accepted. "This is a professional gallery", he says. "Everyone here is an established artist. But it is not expensive art. It is not an exclusive art. it's good art but not expensive. Sales, although a problem when the gallery first opened, are not a problem of major proportions now. Mr. Heim leafs through a card index and pulls out a bundle of cards representing paintings sold. He counts them and says these cards represent the sale of paintings of one artist, 17 paintings, some in the $500 and $1000 range. "We've sold a lot of work in the last two months" he says. "Of my own works, I've sold 11 pieces in a four- week period which is quite significant." People come from Toronto, Kitchener and London, but I'd like to see more support from the local people. "Local people make up only about 50 per cent of the visitors, by local I mean Hanover, Walkerton etc. We've had a reasonably good response but I feel we need an awful lot more support in order to have this place here for the people. We have it on the period of three, maybe four years trial, and if we don't feel by then it can go, then we'll have to give up the idea. "If they support us with attendance and enough sales to make it financia- lly possible to carry on, we'll put up a permanent building." Mr. Heim thinks he may be stupid to be trying to run an art gallery in a rural area, that he may be stupid Just to try to make a living as an artist in a rural area. "We've made a few mistakes with the gallery,' he says. "We've had a lot of serious work here that is too far removed from most people's taste and comprehension. It's something that always happens with serious artists. We are trying to look ahead, we're advan- ced in our thinking, that's why we are artists. "We have to go forward, we can't go back in time. It always takes a while for the public to catch on and the taste sort of changes in time. "But now we have a mixture of things or traditional work and some of the serious I ork for people who want it. And we have people who won't even look at a landscape. They'll go straight to Bruce Smith's work and say 'That's beautiful.' But we have a lot of people who come in and look at