Age, Biography and Wiki
Siebren Versteeg was born on 5 August, 1971 in New Haven, Connecticut, United States, is a Siebren Versteeg is artist. Discover Siebren Versteeg's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 53 years old?
Popular As |
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Occupation |
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Age |
53 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Leo |
Born |
5 August, 1971 |
Birthday |
5 August |
Birthplace |
New Haven, Connecticut, United States |
Nationality |
United States
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 5 August.
He is a member of famous Artist with the age 53 years old group.
Siebren Versteeg Height, Weight & Measurements
At 53 years old, Siebren Versteeg height not available right now. We will update Siebren Versteeg's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Not Available |
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Not Available |
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Not Available |
Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Siebren Versteeg Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Siebren Versteeg worth at the age of 53 years old? Siebren Versteeg’s income source is mostly from being a successful Artist. He is from United States. We have estimated Siebren Versteeg's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2024 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2023 |
Pending |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
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Not Available |
Source of Income |
Artist |
Siebren Versteeg Social Network
Timeline
After working as a CNC programmer at United Precision in the late 1970s, Versteeg’s father opened Versteeg Art Fabricators in 1989 under the name “New Haven Art Fabricators". Siebren Versteeg and his sister Emily continue to operate the family business.
Notably, Peter Versteeg oversaw the fabrication of Robert Indiana’s LOVE (1970) sculpture the year before his son’s birth.
A year after Peter’s death in 2021, Siebren Versteeg returned to the sculpture with an ephemeral artwork titled Love Live x Five (2022) Comprising the work are five computer windows stacked in the form a cross, each depicting the same livestream of Versteeg Art Fabricator’s studio as they worked to restore Indiana’s LOVE sculpture.
Siebren Versteeg referenced his father in earlier artworks, too.
Siebren Versteeg (born 1971) is an American artist known for his painting and video works created through digital processes.
His multivalent practice responds to the technology of our time and the way we consume and deploy those technologies.
Heralded by Vulture as “chaotic but illuminating”, the magazine declared Versteeg the idol of “every Harry Potter-loving/Hackers-watching/anti-capitalist computer geek”.
Versteeg's work often relies on ready-made, online data sources for part of its media, with websites like Google, Flickr, and Wikipedia frequently collaborating with Versteeg’s code.
Throughout his career, Versteeg has playfully interacted with constructed identities and painterly abstraction through the use of code.
Versteeg prefers to code in Lingo.
The artist is known to re-articulate familiar presentation formats and information systems popularized online, “ultimately jamming their promise of stability and ubiquity”.
Drawing attention to the variety of opinions, sources, conversations, and enterprises that contribute to the internet’s sprawling information landscape, Versteeg’s work often intervenes between mass media and its end consumer For example, the artist has been known to use recognizable brand identifiers from major companies, such as Napster and Coca-Cola, to deliver a pithy comment, or the day’s headlines from the AP Newswire.
In one series of the artist’s algorithmically-generated artworks, Versteeg instructs his code to paint over the day’s front page of a credible newspaper using brushstrokes programmed to mimic an Abstract Expressionist style.
Versteeg was born in 1971 in New Haven, Connecticut to Louise and Peter Versteeg.
He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the School of Art Institute of Chicago in 1995 and his Masters of Fine Arts from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2004.
Versteeg’s father built a career in fine art fabrication beginning in Los Angeles, where he cast sculptures for Tom Holland.
Between 1999 and 2003, Versteeg showed works through video screenings at artist-run spaces, online and at theatrical venues.
During this period, Versteeg participated in www.WhitneyBiennial.Com, an online exhibit that made a guerilla art-style presentation on the back doors of 23 U-Haul trucks surrounding the museum during the 2002 Whitney Biennial Gala.
The presentation intended to “expose multiple, sometimes conflicting currents, as well as extraordinary works that fall outside of any conventional aesthetic definition”.
An important work from this period is Versteeg’s Dynamic Ribbon Device (2003), which juxtaposes the Associated Press’s live news feed with “mass-media gadgetry”.
In the artwork, Coca-Cola’s trademark white ribbon billows across a red background plasma screen while a scrolling script registers headline news.
In November 2003, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago mounted a solo show for Versteeg, the artist’s first solo exhibition at a major institution.
Curated in the museum’s 12 x 12: New Artists/New Work, Versteeg’s Being Here and History unpack our perception of time by appropriating pop culture.
Three scenes are depicted in Being Here (2003): a digital animation showing the artist in a waiting room; the current day and time; and, a television mounted to the wall.
History confronts the viewer with a large replica of The History Channel’s logo.
A year later, Katie Geha curated History and Being Here at the Ulrich Museum of Art in Wichita, Kansas, an important solo exhibition in Versteeg’s early career that reaffirmed the artist’s presentation at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago.
In 2005, the artist created The MP3 Collection of My Father, which was exhibited in Press Enter to Exit, Versteeg’s second show at Rhona Hoffman Gallery.
The work allowed visitors to listen to Peter Versteeg’s “MP3 collection of popular African music by navigating a PC program that also allowed users to illegally burn CDs of the recorded files".
Shown in determination, Versteeg’s debut solo presentation at Rhona Hoffman Gallery in 2005, one journalist noted that condensation droplets flowing down the scrolling graphics in the work seem to be placed “as if to add luster to this intramural media affair”.
Versteeg gained representation by Rhona Hoffman Gallery by 2005, and with Max Protetch Gallery in 2007.
He continued to exhibit work in group shows and several museums exhibited Versteeg's work in solo and group settings.
In 2007, Versteeg contributed to a group show at New York-based gallery Foxy Productions titled Solar Set, a reference to a boxed artwork by Joseph Cornell from 1958 in which Cornell “collected and arranged solar statistics, spherical objects, and images of the sun, among other elements, to create an idiosyncratic universe in miniature”.
In 2020, on the occasion of Versteeg’s email-exhibition In20%Memory, Geha reflected on the cultural environment surrounding Versteeg’s Being Here (2003): “In 2004, I showed the live computer work Being Here (2003) at the Ulrich Museum of Art.
I went into the gallery every day and watched the run up to the re-election of President Bush.
It was a devastating time in America...
It is no surprise during this fraught political climate [of the COVID-19 pandemic] that Versteeg has chosen to resurrect and rework this piece, which so firmly places the viewer in this excruciating moment, minute by minute.
It is also telling that our belief in common truths, of maybe any belief system at all, is so thoroughly eroded in our current mediated environment.
Live news is as much a provisional memorial as anything else.
Take, for instance, the CNN sign in Atlanta, covered with graffiti by Black Lives Matter protesters earlier this summer; one of the most touching works of art I’ve seen."