Petrus Spronk
Ceramicist and Sculptor
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PETRUS SPRONK Born: Haarlem,The Netherlands on 13 October (year unknown). Year of arrival in Australia: 1 December 1957 Ship: Waterman Naturalised: 1966 Education: Post Graduate Degree of Fine Art, South Australian School of Art. Occupation: Ceramicist and Sculptor. Living: Daylesford, Victoria |
In the beginning: My name is Petrus Spronk, a name which got me introduced once, when I was on tour with my portable ceramic workshop in Ireland, as a one-man Rock & Roll-band. As a result I had a lot to live up to, but being in Ireland I did. When was I born? As if that is important. I was born that is the point. Not delivered by an ooievaar [stork], as my mother once told me. The place I arrived in this world was Haarlem, North Holland, and the time was Ten Minutes to Midday, confirmed by my mother when she could still remember such things. Later, this "Ten Minutes to Midday" became the title for an art project which ran from 13th October (day of my birth) 2003, till 12th October 2004. It started in the place I now live, Daylesford, Victoria and concluded in Seoul, Korea. Yeah, it is a long story.
Early work: After being deemed not worthy of high school, for two years running, I was placed in an apprenticeship. The next best thing. "If you do not want to use your head, learn to use your hands." Sound advice, because it was as a result of engaging the world with my hands that it started to make sense. And I in it. During 1957 my family decided to move to Australia along with thousands of other Dutch people and there I found myself in a new land with old, but very useful, fine pastry-making skills. After five years of people continuously eating my work plus the boredom of the repetitive nature of that work I decided to look elsewhere.
| I looked in at the local Art School (Adelaide) and, once observed the
scene, signed up and never ever, even for one hungry minute, looked
back. I felt that I had finally arrived home. Time for art and travel. |
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| After I taught for a few years (two years at Secondary [back at high school and it still did not suit me] and two years at W.A. School of Art, followed by a year in a school of my own creation.**) |
Eight years later, I returned home totally enriched and ready to go. I also returned home with some 12,000 slides and as many stories (as a result I conducted many workshops and illustrated lectures) plus more ideas for ceramic making than I could poke a sticky clay finger at.
| Other work: Where to start? At the beginning and one step at the time.
I had to. After my travel, there wasn't any money left in the kitty. I recall sitting in the Flinders Ranges in an old shed/house I had bought when I was still a teacher, many years before, wondering how I would start without any income. |
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All went well during the eighties. I made new work, it was appreciated and sold well. I presented many exhibitions and received much ceramic kudos.
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That was until 1989 when a recession (I did not have to have)
occurred. One of the results of this recession was a lack of interest in art in general and of ceramics in particular. It became hard to sell work. I had to change course. |
As a result of a number of commissions I created aspects of town halls, churches, banks, museums, all pretty exact. This extended project, of being an artist in the street, introduced me to the public on a direct basis. This meant that besides my work in the street I had to deal with all sorts of both positive and negative comments. "What a waste of time mate," a typical remark. It did not hurt me, although it made me strong and sharpened my wit.
At that time there appeared an advertisement in the Age newspaper for a commission for a public sculpture needed for Swanston Walk in Central Melbourne. I knew at once what I would propose.
| A similar piece to the sand works
I had been making for a few years now, but then in stone. I drew up the
ideas, made up a story to explain the work and send it off. I was short-listed. I now made a model, created a budget, drew a set of technical drawings and send all that off. |
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It still is a very popular public
art work, and has by now become an almost iconic Melbourne image. It was recently voted the most popular public sculpture, by a local Melbourne Newspaper. This was the start of my life as a sculptor of public Art works. |
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It was at about this time that I started to become interested in being articulate about my work and work methods. And since with me one thing seems to lead to another, I have, at this moment in time, been writing (for eight years) a column for the local newspaper titled "The Artist's View." I just penned my two-hundredth column. As part of this writing aspect of my life I earned a "Writer in Residence Project" also in Korea. A wonderful time which I have extensively written about. Both the 200 columns and the "Korean Odyssey" stories are available as digital productions.
Email me on art@petrusspronk.com. If you are interested.
I am not yet old, but just in case I will be one day, and need to remain independent as long as possible, I am working on the biggest project of my life.
| It is titled 'Strong Old Age'. This project consists of five parts: Good exercise (daily walk of five kilometres) Good diet (fresh food, no stuff from tins and boxes) Good thoughts (which I keep positive and sane by my work in the vegetable garden and studio and my forest walks). |
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| Good work (work with
a creative aspect) and Good Friends (people you can trust with your
happiness). In this way I cruise along my path of life, not my chosen path, but the path that is continuously creating and re-creating itself anew by walking it, by doing it, by working it. |
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Petrus Spronk, August 2006
*Each year, when my birthday comes around, I become open to receive a word, although do not ask me where it comes form, it arrives because I ask for it. A word to sustain me throughout the year. I apply it when things get a little difficult. Doing that provides a shift. The year which started 13th October 2003 the word which arrived was 'Discipline.'. So I designed a project to go with it. I called my mother and asked her what time of day I was born. "Ten minutes to midday" was the answer. For one year, I took a photograph each day at ten minutes to midday. Not of myself but the place or situation I was in. Never missed a day. First few weeks I used an alarm, then it became part of my day. Great project. **For a year or so I ran my own ceramic school. This consisted out of freelance workshops conducted, in the main, in and around rural W.A. from Kununurra to Albany. Time about 1973.
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Click on the following LINKS to view: Collections & Exhibitions Petrus Spronk Home Page Artist's talk, Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, September 2006: 'Reflections on a Korean Odyssey' Story Collection: (1) Childhood Memory; (2) War Story; (3) Yellow Tulip; (4) Sinterklaas |
Ceramic images: Alison Pouliot










