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Richard Roy
To enter the
Musée du patrimoine Louis-Emile-Beauregard is to enter a
land of Lilliputian delight. Take a trip to yesteryear and visit
the miniature world of Louis-Émile Beauregard, where, as
the brochure proclaims, "your amazement is guaranteed."
The genius
of Louis-Émile Beauregard (1922-1989), like that of Jonathan
Swift, plays upon our imagination. His oeuvre of 64 working miniature
models and scenes, made of wood and built to scale, will enthrall
children and adults alike. Here you can discover tiny, fully functioning
farm machinery; a wee schoolhouse where the teacher interacts with
her pupils; and a kitchen scene where a wife bakes cookies in the
wood stove while her pipe-smoking husband relaxes in his rocking
chair. But, the piece-de-resistance is the incredibly detailed general
store displaying shelves stacked with cereals, pots, clothing, and
countless other necessities. A double-barreled shotgun hanging on
the wall of the store breaks open to load cartridges. The scale,
beside the store's proprietor, works also, as does the grain mill,
washboards, and meat grinders behind him.
"I
CAN FEEL THEIR PRESENCE"
Feeling like the "man-mountain" Gulliver, I found myself
to be a wonderer in a fantasy world, a world where the models could
come to life at any moment. I swear that I detected movement when
I would look away and back quickly, and thankfully, I am not the
only one to feel this way. "Your feeling is good; it's their
life that we are looking at," Museum Director Nancy Duchesne
said. "The person that installed the display felt the people
were alive and in a state of constant movement, and several visitors
have told me that they are certain a model has moved."
The General Store. (Photo: Manon Rousso)
"All the
models are in a position of motion; not one is static, and so we
naturally fall into the movement of action with them," Duchesne
continued. "When I work late at night, I can feel their presence,
and sometimes that of Louis-Émile, and I know that I'm not
alone. They are with me."
Duchesne
went on to say, that the reason Beauregard's "people"
look so real is probably because Beauregard would ask his daughter
to stand in front of a mirror while he carved his characters. He
would study the way her clothes hung, for example, and he would
incorporate the wrinkles into his creations.
The Old Kitchen.
(Photo: Manon Rousso)
POSTMASTER
AND SCULPTOR
Beauregard, who regarded himself as a sculptor and a handyman, was
a postmaster by trade and never worked on a farm, but he had a high
regard for farmers and enjoyed sculpting models of farm machinery.
"Farm machinery fascinates me," he would say. "And
I want to leave something to remember them by." Beauregard
and his daughter would locate an old rusting piece of machinery,
then his daughter would photograph the object while Beauregard took
its measurements. He was always careful to carve his work to the
scale of 1.5 inches to the foot.
Beauregard
learned his woodworking skills from his father: "My father
lent me the tools and I supplied the creativity." Beauregard
never took courses and made the models in his spare time over a
period of eleven years, beginning at the age of 55. Some of his
models took 40 to 50 hours to create, and his masterpiece, the general
store, required more than 500 hours. Louis-Émile Beauregard
vowed that his artwork would never be sold as long as he lived.
After
touring the museum, be sure to visit Marbleton/St-Adolphe-de-Dudswell,
one of the most beautiful villages in Quebec. This village yields
a rich history with majestic, historic dwellings and the distinctive
architecture of Protestant churches dating back to 1837. Here you
will also find the Inhabited Forest of Dudswell, a rustic woods
located in the heart of the municipality, that boasts seven pedestrian
trails. You can enjoy a picnic while basking in nature. While in
the area, you can climb a mountain, view deer in their natural habitat,
fish in one of several lakes or rivers, or enjoy a few holes of
golf. This is truly a tourists' paradise.
Right: Museum Director Nancy Duchesne. (Photo: Richard Roy)
For more information
on the museum, contact Nancy Duchesne at: (819) 887-6093; by email:
marbidu.atcd@globetrotter.net
; or by mail: at Musée Beauregard, 900 rue du Lac Dudswell,
Secteur Marbleton, Québec, JOB 2L0.

Nancy Duchesne showing off some souvenirs.
(Photo: Richard Roy)
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