In art history Scheltema is an 'important artist in Australia'. He gained a reputation as a masterly painter of pastoral scenes, particularly as a specialist of foreground livestock in the landscape, a genre developed by
Paulus Potter in 17th century Holland with Potter's "Young Bull" hanging in the
Mauritshuis Museum in Scheltema's birthplace where he lived until the age of 5 and later studied for two years. His skills in that genre were often publicly acknowledged in Australian newspapers. His treatment of livestock was not limited to making them a focal landscape element in the painting, but he often showed them in action, such as drinking, running, breaking away being chased, being shorn or fed, showing what they were watching, depicting their interaction with humans as well as the landscape. He produced several equine works, some with the movement of full gallop. Photos of the colorful oils of his well known bullock teams are repeatedly used to illustrate the narratives of Australian bullock team history, besides contemporary black and white photographs. He painted more bullock teams than any other painter in Australia. His work "Bullock Team Resting" was part of the "Exhibition of Australian Art In London" of 1898. > His paintings were not just pleasant pictures, but tended to tell a story in well captured typical Australian bush settings, sometimes with fog, haze, dust or other atmospheric effects. Scheltema himself, having been a student of Charles Verlat (who painted almost humanized animals), considered that he was painting 'animals' in Australian landscapes rather than only those with foreground 'livestock', for which he is so well known. He realized that the original Australian landscape did not have 'livestock'. So he painted also landscapes with foreground kangaroos, at least one being also in a public gallery collection, e.g. the Glen Eira City Council Gallery. Although he had been educated in Europe he immediately developed a sharp eye for the colors and textures of the Australian landscape, as he did not only paint outdoors all over rural Victoria, but studied individual tree and shrub species up close. Many of his rural works focus on or include one large gum tree, as a uniting feature. He would explain the rural life in paintings which others of the period, such as
Banjo Patterson and
Henry Lawson, had explained in writing indeed poetry. In 1895 one of his paintings,
Driving in the Cows was purchased by the
National Gallery of Victoria. Since then all Australian State Galleries and the
National Gallery of Australia would own at least one of his paintings, as do the larger regional galleries in Victoria, such as those at
Ballarat,
Benalla,
Sale,
Hamilton and
Bendigo. The latter gallery (then called Sandhurst Art Gallery) was the first public gallery to have a work of Scheltema in its collection, gifted to it shortly after his arrival by a Bendigo solicitor, who had traveled to Melbourne to buy the best painting he could find as his donation. Called 'Going to Camp', it shows 12 oxen pulling a cart with a load of wool bales in front of a great sunset also lighting the back of the moving bullock train from reflection of the sun in the stream behind the animals, like a 'double
contre-jour'. It is also the first known contre-jour painting in Australia showing the effect of the diverging bovine leg shadows. The
Hamilton Gallery keeps five livestock-in-landscape pieces by Scheltema in their collection. His exceptional chiaroscuro work "The Sundowners", depicting three men at night lit on just one side by a fire in the bush, shows he could paint an almost physically felt suggestion of different temperatures in different parts of the painting. The
Benalla Art Gallery owns his painting 'Full Swing on the Board', the first Australian painting showing mechanized sheep shearing. It was commissioned by Mr. and Mrs. Victor Armytage of the property "Ingleby" at Winchelsea, Victoria, now heritage listed. Mr Armytage, who paid eight pounds for it, is shown in the picture as one of the shearers and it was painted in four days during the last week of October 1904. In the chapter about the contribution of the Dutch to pre-war Australia in the 1927 book "Non-Britishers in Australia" by J. Ling, two names of Dutch immigrants are mentioned:
Guillaume Delprat, the general manager of BHP, and Jan Hendrik Scheltema. His became a familiar name around Melbourne and in the Australian art world. He has been compared favorably with
Louis Buvelot. His painting there 'Bullock Team Resting' indicates also that he was already then known, even outside Victoria, for painting that kind of subject, so the N.S.W. selection committee decided that he should be represented with one of those. ==Family==