Powered byPowered by Gallerease

About the artist

Aldo van den Broek (1985) is a Dutch self-taught visual artist and painter known for his raw, expressive visual language in which transience, history, and human interaction take center stage. His work operates at the intersection of abstraction and figuration and is characterized by a layered construction of paint, scratches, texts, and found image fragments. This results in compositions that feel simultaneously vulnerable and powerful, as if traces of memories, urban landscapes, and human presence have been left behind in the canvas.

Van den Broek works intuitively and physically; the creative process itself plays an important role in his oeuvre. He uses diverse materials and techniques to create surfaces that appear weathered, damaged, or almost archaeological. Influences from street culture, architecture, photography, and art history resonate in his paintings, without ever fully referencing a single stylistic tradition. It is precisely this tension between control and decay that gives his work an intense, almost tangible energy.

His oeuvre explores how time and human actions leave traces—both on objects and in collective memories. The works often evoke associations with crumbling walls, forgotten posters, or fragments from a vanished city, yet remain open to personal interpretation. In doing so, Van den Broek creates a visual world that is both confrontational and poetic, in which beauty emerges from imperfection and erosion.

All artworks