
About this artist

Flemish artist, Veurne-born farmer's son turned Sint-Lukas visionary, orchestrates acrylic surrealism through his iconic pink-faced "aesthetics critics" in the episodic White Cube - fusing Disney nostalgia with biting social commentary while gleefully dissolving boundaries between Pop and Underground culture in Ghent.

YooshiQ's Note
Brecht Vandenbroucke is a Flemish artist born in Veurne in 1986. He studied illustration at the Sint-Lukas University College of Art and Design and has established himself over the past years as an illustrator, painter, comic author, and filmmaker. Coming from a family of mostly farmers, his upbringing lacked discussion on art; instead, he found inspiration in television and the characters on cereal boxes, sparking a lifelong creative journey.
His illustrative style draws from Disney cartoons, vintage journal comics, and contemporary Pop-Art artists, with influences including Mark Beyer, ATAK, Charlotte Salomon, Roland Topor, Henry Darger, David Shrigley, Daisuke Ichiba, and Glen Baxter. Vandenbroucke embraces all forms of culture, seeing no distinction between Pop and Underground culture. His acrylic paintings and comics echo surrealist influences while addressing social subjects such as art, economy, the working class, and racism, all expressed with his distinctive sense of humour.
His most significant comic work to date is the episodic narrative White Cube (2013), which began as a fanzine and is now available in hardcover. It features two nearly identical bald men with pink faces, whom Vandenbroucke calls the "aesthetics critics." These characters visit art exhibitions with gleeful buoyancy, making naïve and malicious comments about contemporary art, sometimes physically altering artworks or using Facebook thumbs-up to express opinions. Their behaviour extends into everyday life, leading to bizarre situations. The painted panels often manage without words, confining dialogue to sign language.
Vandenbroucke's work explores themes of popular culture, happiness, madness, surrealism, loneliness, death, and alienation. While serious issues underpin his subjects, he identifies fun as his central driving force. He is particularly interested in doubt and uses his creative process to open dialogue about existence. The artist lives and works in Ghent.

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