Tatiana Trouvé joins Xavier Hufkens
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Tatiana Trouvé joins Xavier Hufkens
Installation view: Tatiana Trouvé. The strange Life of Things, 2025, Palazzo Grassi, Venice Photo: Marco Cappelletti and Giuseppe Miotto / Marco Cappelletti Studio © Palazzo Grassi, Pinault Collection.



BRUSSELS.- Xavier Hufkens announced representation of French-Italian artist Tatiana Trouvé. Widely acclaimed for her conceptually rigorous and formally refined practice, Trouvé works across media—combining drawing, sculpture, and installation—to create poetic environments that explore memory, temporality, and the architecture of absence. The artist is also represented by Gagosian.


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Trouvé will inaugurate her first solo exhibition with the gallery in Brussels in September 2026. Her work is currently the subject of a major exhibition at the Palazzo Grassi, presented by the Pinault Collection, on view through 4 January 2026.

Xavier Hufkens: “Tatiana Trouvé is one of those singular artists with an extraordinary ability to give form to abstract notions like time and memory. Effortlessly blending drawing, sculpture, and installation, her practice feels both intimate and monumental. It’s a true pleasure to welcome her to the gallery—a new chapter that feels as natural as it is exciting.”

Tatiana Trouvé: “It’s a privilege to be joining a gallery whose vision and programme I have long admired. I am particularly excited to conceive a new exhibition for the St-Georges gallery space, whose architecture offers an inspiring new environment for my work.”

Tatiana Trouvé has developed a vast and ambitious body of work in which drawing, sculpture, and installation are intricately interwoven. Her practice moves seamlessly between the imagined and the constructed, forming a poetic visual language that explores time as suspended, memory through its ruptures, and spatial disorientation.

Trouvé first garnered critical attention with Bureau d’Activités Implicites (1997–2007), a formative project she described as a “laboratory of time.” Combining fictional documents, personal archives, and architectural modules, it introduced many of the thematic and formal concerns that continue to shape her work: the construction of psychological and physical space, the layering of memory, and the tension between presence and absence.

Sculptural works often unfold in suspended or transitional environments. Cast objects—chairs, bags, ropes, architectural fragments—inhabit spaces that feel paused or emptied, evoking liminality and unease. Materials such as bronze, copper, marble, and glass are treated with precision and restraint, contributing to atmospheres of quiet disorientation.

Drawing is not a preparatory gesture but a central strand of her practice. Her large-scale graphite works blend architectural and landscape elements with references from her own studio, forming complex mnemonic terrains. These drawings explore memory not by showing things exactly as they were, but through distortion, omission, and repetition. They invite viewers into non-linear stories shaped by both remembering and imagining. Rather than depicting events, Trouvé reimagines how we experience time and space, making visible the invisible architectures of memory and thought.

Tatiana Trouvé (b. 1968, Cosenza, Italy) was raised in Dakar, Senegal and now lives and works in Paris, France. She studied at Villa Arson in Nice, France and later at Ateliers ’63 (now De Ateliers) in the Netherlands. She currently teaches at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. The artist’s first solo exhibition took place at the Centre national d’art contemporain at Villa Arson in 1997, and her first retrospective, The Longest Echo, was held at MAMCO, Geneva in 2014. In 2022, she was the subject of a major monographic exhibition, Le grand atlas de la désorientation, at the Centre Pompidou, Paris. Trouvé is the recipient of numerous awards, including the Pernod Ricard Foundation Prize (2002), the Marcel Duchamp Prize (2007), the ACACIA Prize (Italy, 2014), and the Rosa Schapire Art Prize (Germany, 2019). In 2020, she was named Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Ministry of Culture and Communication.


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