Background
His father was a cabinet maker, appointed by Princess von Wied as Superintendent of the Pavilion von Wied in Scheveningen, where his parents lived.
His father was a cabinet maker, appointed by Princess von Wied as Superintendent of the Pavilion von Wied in Scheveningen, where his parents lived.
In 1913 he attended the National Training College in Nijmegen. Later he studied drawing at the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague. William Henry Bik was his teacher.
His vision influenced the Nieuwe Haagse School movement. Young Schrofer was obsessed with drawing. After his military service, he became a teacher in the municipality of The Hague, where he soon specialised in drawing lessons.
From 1937 to 1963 he was professor in the painting department at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague.
Foreign a few years (1943-1949) he was Professor at the Institute Applied Art, which later became the Rietveld Academie. Schrofer was one of the founders of the Verve group - he coined the name.
He was loved by his students. He received them at home and he taught them to be free to live and work.
Among his pupils were: Hermanus Berserik, Toon Wegner and Company Westerik.
In his time he was a famous Hagenaar. Schrofer painted in different styles and was a nonconformist. In the 1930s and 1940s he produced abstract paintings.
Around 1948, precisely at the time of Cobra, he moved onto figurative painting.
With Paul Citroen, Rein Draijer, Willem Jacob Rozendaal and Han van Dam, he had great influence on the students who are now under the Nieuwe Haagse School banner. In 1963 Schrofer set up a studio in Voorschoten in an old bakery on the Molenlaan.
Here he worked only on figurative paintings, including a painting of three friends with the price tag, "ntk" (not for sale).