Place | Asia: Netherlands East Indies, Java, Bandoeng |
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Accession Number | ART91971 |
Collection type | Art |
Measurement | Overall: 24.7 x 16.2 cm |
Object type | Work on paper |
Physical description | watercolour, pencil, pen and black ink on buff paper laid on tissue paper |
Maker |
Van Grondelle, Connie |
Place made | Netherlands East Indies: Java, Bandoeng |
Date made | 1943 |
Conflict |
Second World War, 1939-1945 |
Copyright |
Item copyright: External copyright |
Voorzichtig (Careful)
The boys had to do all the heavy lifting in the kitchen at Camp Karees, Bandoeng. The woman is Mrs Hessels van Zalm and she is warning the boys to be careful. Often 'the boys would stumble, fall in the fire and spill the cooked rice. She insisted to always be there when the baskets of rice were taken away.' Correspondence of Mrs Hanny Balt, November 2001. Mrs Hanny Balt, then Hanny Hessels, was an internee of Camp Karees along with her sister Dicki, nicknamed Ponny, her youngest brother Dirk, nicknamed Bully, her grandfather Dirk Van Zalm and her mother Mrs Frederika Hessels Van Zalm. This is one of 28 drawings created by internees of Camp Karees and presented to Mrs Frederika Hessels Van Zalm as a token of appreciation for her tireless work running the camp's kitchen. Camp Karees was one of many internment camps created in Indonesia, by the Japanese, for the detainment of Dutch residents in the Second World War. Camp Karees was created for the detainment of women and children. A number of elderly men were also detained at Camp Karees. The camp held 6000 internees and private cooking was forbidden. All meals were provided form a central kitchen and trading for food from outside the camp was severely punished. 'Karees was a collection of houses in the poorer section of Bandoeng, fenced off with gedek (plaited bamboo sheets) topped with barbed wire.' Shirlie Fenton Huie, 1992.