Dutch artist Vincent Uilenbroek is renowned for his innovative approach to screen printing, blending technical expertise with experimentation in techniques, colors, and materials like wood and plexiglass.

His work often blurs the line between painting and graphic art, transforming a typically reproducible medium into a tool for unique creations.

Operating at the crossroads of minimalist abstraction, conceptual art, and installation art, Uilenbroek incorporates studio traces—stencils, tape, and residual forms—into his works, challenging traditional material hierarchies. He explores the interplay between process and result, often deviating from standard techniques, such as taping the center of a screen instead of the edges or intentionally aging printed bases for new layers of color.

Born in 1980 in Haarlem, Netherlands, Uilenbroek works in a historic monastery studio. Trained at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie, The Hague’s Royal Academy of Art, and Kunsthochschule Berlin Weissensee, his work is featured in notable collections, including the Teylers Museum and the AkzoNobel Art Foundation.

In essence, Uilenbroek redefines screen printing as a unique, conceptual, and experimental art form.