He is best known for his vivid visual impressions of landscapes and historical architectural monuments particularly those surviving in locations throughout Indonesia, the land where he was born in 1938. A child of Dutch parents, John entered the world in the city of Sukabumi, and spent his early years on a tea plantation in West Java, where his father had been hired as administrateur. Following the tribulation of the Pacific War, the van der Sterren family decided to emigrate to New Zealand, where John received his formal education; once graduated he entered the world of advertising in Auckland. This in fact was the profession that eventually brought him back to Indonesia, where he returned in 1983. Precisely ten years later, John held his solo exhibition in Jakarta, at the Duta Fine Arts Foundation, a leading showcase which over several decades has featured numerous emerging artists, as well as recognized international masters. On that occasion, keen interest among art lovers gave John van der Sterren the confidence to concentrate more and more on developing his own strongly original style of painting. John van der Sterren works out of a conservative artistic tradition, in which good painting stems directly from good drawing. He does not choose paint on location, rather preferring to create bold black and white sketches. He customarily works in charcoal or pen and ink, and the resultant drawings serve later to inspire the creation of paintings, which he passionately fashions in his in Central Java studio. These drawings, fashioned from the visual and emotional experience of the location, help the artist to not only capture the structure of a scene but also to embody the essence of its spirit, unencumbered by any temptation to slavishly follow an initial visual impression. The artist is thus free to commit a creation to canvas, working in his own Fauvist style. * From "Old Surabaya", Sketchbook by the artist John van der Sterren. Text by Byron Black, Hexart Publishers, Jakarta, 2004. This exhibition was held on 15 January 2004 - 27 February 2004 |