Virginie Hucher

Virginie Hucher

Born in France, artist Virginie Hucher has always cultivated an intimate relationship with matter and living things. A graduate in visual arts, she trained with artists such as Michel Gouéry, Bertrand Moulin, Bruno Lebel, and Marc Alberghina, gradually developing a unique artistic language that lies between abstraction and organic forms. Virginie explores the connections between nature, the body, and the transformation of living organisms through painting, color, performance, and sculpture. Her works evoke hybrid forms—vegetal, mineral, or cellular—where color becomes breath.

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Born in France, artist Virginie Hucher has always cultivated an intimate relationship with matter and living things. A graduate in visual arts, she trained with artists such as Michel Gouéry, Bertrand Moulin, Bruno Lebel, and Marc Alberghina, gradually developing a unique artistic language that lies between abstraction and organic forms. Virginie explores the connections between nature, the body, and the transformation of living things through painting, color, performance, and sculpture. Her works evoke hybrid, vegetal, mineral, or cellular forms, where color becomes breath. By reducing her compositions to their essence, she questions scale, perception, and our intimate connection to the world. Her "primal bodies," to borrow Lucretius's phrase, oscillate between microcosm and macrocosm, between origins and infinity. For Virginie Hucher, every gesture is born from the mystery of the present. Her sensitive and vibrant work invites contemplation of life, at once fragile, multifaceted, and infinitely poetic.

  • Born in France, artist Virginie Hucher has always cultivated an intimate relationship with matter and living things. A graduate in visual arts, she trained with artists such as Michel Gouéry, Bertrand Moulin, Bruno Lebel, and Marc Alberghina, gradually developing a unique artistic language that lies between abstraction and organic forms. Virginie explores the connections between nature, the body, and the transformation of living things through painting, color, performance, and sculpture. Her works evoke hybrid, vegetal, mineral, or cellular forms, where color becomes breath. By reducing her compositions to their essence, she questions scale, perception, and our intimate connection to the world. Her "primal bodies," to borrow Lucretius's expression, oscillate between microcosm and macrocosm, between origins and infinity. For Virginie Hucher, every gesture is born from the mystery of the present. Her sensitive and vibrant work invites contemplation of life, at once fragile, multifaceted, and infinitely poetic.