San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Painter was also curator, educator

- By Sam Whiting

Terry St. John was always driving around the East Bay in his paintencru­sted pickup truck looking for an interestin­g view. Maybe it would be an old barn on a hillside with good light and shadows, or a pile of lumber. When he found what he was looking for, he’d pull over, get his easel and oils out of the back and there he’d be — six days a week for a year and a half — painting through all the seasons and in all weather. St. John — who was prone to peeling the paint off a canvas and starting over, eliminatin­g months of work if he did not like what he saw — was a legendary plein air painter with work featured among the permanent collection­s of the de Young Museum, the San Jose Museum of Art and the Oakland Museum of California, for which he served as associate curator of modern painting for 20 years.

A longtime resident of the Berkeley hills, where he grew up, St. John died March 13 in Chiang Mai, Thailand, where he had been living for the past five years. The cause of death was complicati­ons following heart surgery, said his son, Noel St. John. He was 86.

In addition to his impact as a painter, St. John was deeply influentia­l as an instructor, having taught outdoor painting at UC Santa Cruz and serving as chair of the art department at Notre Dame de Namur University in Belmont (San Mateo County).

He was the rare artist and art scholar who held the three most important art jobs at the same time: painter, educator and museum curator.

“Terry brought his relationsh­ips to the landscape and to paint itself to his students, inspiring them to work directly from nature and from human nature,” said Jan Wurm, a Berkeley painter who used to drive out to Mount Diablo on winter mornings to meet St. John, decked in a parka, Elmer Fuddstyle hat, with the ear flaps down, and gloves.

St. John never sat on a stool. He painted while standing, so to work alongside him, Wurm had to be prepared to stand there and freeze all day. In the summer they would be out in the heat, without shade. St. John was willing to endure discomfort to get his work done, slow going as it was.

“Terry had a spectacula­r palette of paint that manifests not only the geography but the light and atmosphere of the landscape,” said Wurm. “He was constantly analyzing his work and pushing it to greater depth.”

Terry Noel St. John was born on Christmas Eve, 1934, in Sacramento. His family moved to Hawaii before statehood, but returned to the Berkeley hills by the time he was in elementary school.

A dictatoria­l art instructor at Berkeley High School turned him off, son Noel said, but he later enrolled in an art class as an elective while an undergrad

uate at UC Berkeley. This changed his entire outlook and he followed his undergradu­ate degree at Cal with an MFA from the California College of the Arts.

While still a graduate student in 1966, he placed a piece in a show at the Legion of Honor.

A few years later he was hired at the Oakland Museum of California where his lasting contributi­on was to organize an influentia­l show in 1972 about the first modern landscape painters in California, called “The Society of Six.” St. John’s viewpoint was that Selden Gile, Louis Siegriest and other California landscape painters of the 1910s and ’20s were directly linked to the Bay Area figurative school of Richard Diebenkorn, David Park, Joan Brown and Elmer Bischoff.

Siegriest was the only one of the six still alive at the time of the show, and he showed favored spots to St. John, which he later explored and passed along to his students.

In 1977, St. John launched a course called “The Outdoor Painters Project” at UC Santa Cruz. The class was oversubscr­ibed with undergradu­ates, plus another dozen or so nonstudent­s who showed up with their easels and followed along at a respectful distance, just to be near St. John.

Among his UCSC students who went on to careers as painters are William Steiger, Claire Thorsen and Lynda Covello.

“Terry instilled a devotion to the practice of painting from nature in his students, through example,” said Robert Poplack, his original teaching assistant, who later served on the art faculty at Notre Dame de Namur. “He never told anyone how to paint, but if you did something he liked, he might say, ‘That looks pretty good.’ ”

In 1990, St. John served as a visiting professor at Stanford University. That same year he joined the permanent art faculty, chairing the art department at Notre Dame de Namur. He also spent two years as artistinre­sidence at Yosemite National Park. Everywhere he went he taught, even at the Breakfast Group, a loose gathering of local painters who met every Monday morning in Berkeley starting in the late 1960s.

“You had to get there early to sit next to Terry to get into a deep conversati­on about painting, which is surprising­ly hard to find,” recalled Wurm, who was part of the group.

Later in his career, St. John started putting figures back into his landscapes — because “I missed them,” he told The Chronicle in a 1998 interview. He debuted the new form in a solo show at St. Mary’s College in Moraga.

“Terry was an incredibly brilliant painter,” said Lisa Chadwick, his gallery representa­tive. “In the last decade of his life, he was so alive and on fire. His colors got brighter and there was a fearlessne­ss to his work.”

The fearlessne­ss was partially derived from a nearfatal blood infection. While in rehab, he promised a nurse that if he made it out he would make a painting for her and he stuck to his word.

In 1989, St. John and his wife Erika were divorced after raising two sons, Noel and Walter, and St. John moved to Rockridge.

He later fell in love with Thailand while on vacation, and ended up moving there. He began working with a studio model named Aunyarat, and they married in 2016.

St. John made his last Bay Area appearance in March 2020, to introduce a body of new paintings in a solo show at Dolby Chadwick Gallery near San Francisco’s Union Square. He arrived one week before the shelterinp­lace order, said Chadwick. His mobility was gone and he needed assistance with walking, but once he got to the podium to discuss his work before an invited audience, he came to life.

“Terry was rare as an artist. That kind of developmen­t of their work, late in life, you don’t see very often,” said Poplack, who moderated a discussion with St. John at the opening. “His paintings got more challengin­g and more interestin­g.”

St. John is survived by his wife Aunyarat, of Chiang Mai, Thailand; exwife Erika St. John of Berkeley; sons Noel of San Jose and Walter of New York City; and grandson Liam St. John.

A memorial will be planned for summer.

 ?? Jan Wurm 2016 ?? Terry St. John, at exhibition at the Richmond Art Center, lived in Thailand the last five years.
Jan Wurm 2016 Terry St. John, at exhibition at the Richmond Art Center, lived in Thailand the last five years.
 ?? William Steiger ?? Terry St. John works on a canvas in Santa Cruz, circa 1983.
William Steiger Terry St. John works on a canvas in Santa Cruz, circa 1983.

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