We lived in Saskatchewan for over 30 years and always meant to
visit the Imhoff Gallery in St. Walburg . . . maybe next year. Now I’m sorry we didn’t make it there until this year because
the girls would have enjoyed it.
First
off, you have to drive along lovely country roads.
When you get there, the Gallery is all gingerbread on the
outside and there's still lots of his work inside.
Can you see the faded mural?
Count Berthold von Imhoff (January 14, 1868 – December 14,
1939) was born in Germany. When he was
16, he won an award for a grand painting of Emperor Frederick which you can see
in Lloydminster at the Tourist Center/Museum.
He studied art, got married, and immigrated to Reading,
Pennsylvania, USA. The cathedral in
Reading contains some of his most important work.
Imhoff’s love of hunting brought him to Saskatchewan. He bought himself a farm near St. Walburg,
hired some workers, and did it up in style.
This
is the teeny house they lived in just at first.
The big house is occupied by his descendants (he had 7 kids), but two rooms are
kept in their original state as a museum.
These rooms FASCINATED me: the
way they were painted, the carved mouldings, the old furniture, and the walls covered with hunting
trophies.
Imhoff shipped huge religious
canvases to Europe and to the United States where they were glued onto walls to
decorate churches. In Saskatchewan, he contributed his work to
many small churches for free.
The
Depression years hit hard though and Imhoff ran out of money. When he was invited to Rome to receive a
knighthood from the pope, Imhoff didn’t have enough money to buy a suit.
After this very
pleasant tour and chat with the local lady who was staffing the gallery just
for the day, we headed into the nearby town of St. Walburg for refreshments at
the Farmhouse Inn and Restaurant.
It was a lovely
day to sit outside.
The gravy that came
with Bryan’s fries was FANTASTIC!
I also enjoyed
my coffee and a Butter Tart slice.
BUTTER TART SLICE.
½ cup
butter
1 cup
flour
2 tbsp
icing sugar
Blend
these together in a food processor; then press into a nine inch square
pan. Bake 5 minutes at 350.
Topping:
1 ½ cups
brown sugar
¼ cup
butter
1 cup
raisins
2 eggs
1 tbsp
vinegar
Mix
topping ingredients together. Pour over
cookie base. Bake 25 minutes at 350.
Ahhhhh! so good and so easy that you'll be able to kick back and reminisce about the good ol' days when overworked women like our mothers made REAL BUTTER TARTS.
******
P.S. Imhoff decorated
over 90 churches. If you’d like to find
out where they are, look him up on
Wikipedia!
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