After graduating from Saint Martins, Prouvost worked as an assistant to the artist John Latham, who she describes as "more like a grandfather than my real grandfather".[4] She has exhibited at Tate Britain[5] and the Institute of Contemporary Arts.[6]
Prouvost won the Turner Prize in 2013 for an installation named Wantee made in response to the artist Kurt Schwitters. In a tea party setting a film describes a fictional relationship between Prouvost's grandfather and Schwitters.[10] The work is named in reference to the habit of Schwitters' partner of asking guests if they "want tea".[11] The panel described the work as "outstanding for its complex and courageous combination of images and objects in a deeply atmospheric environment".[12] Prouvost was generally considered a surprise winner.[3]
In 2014, Prouvost staged her first solo museum exhibition in the United States at the New Museum, titled For Forgetting.[13]
In 2018, Prouvost created an installation for the Palais de Tokyo in Paris titled Ring Sing and drink for Trespassing.[14]
Prouvost has two children.[18] After living in the United Kingdom for 18 years, she moved to Antwerp in 2014.[19] She lives and works in Molenbeek.[20]
Selected works
2007: Owt, video
2010: I need to take care of my conceptual Grand dad, video
2010: The Artist, video
2010: It Heat Hit, video
2011: The Wanderer, video
2012: Why does Gregor never rings, video installation
2013: Farfromwords: car mirrors eat raspberries when swimming through the sun, to swallow sweet smells, video installation
2013: Wantee, video installation
2014: Visitor center, video installation
2016: We would be floating away from the dirty past, video installation
2016: Lick in the Past, video
2017: Dit Learn, video
2019: Deep See Blue Surrounding You / Vois Ce Bleu Profond Te Fondre, in the French Pavilion at the 58th Venice Biennale
2020: Re-dit-en-un-in-learning, video
2021: Touching To Sea You Through Our Extremities, sculpture at La Panne, Triennial Beaufort (Beaufort21)
2021: In Your Own Time, tingalong, tingalong, Who's Been Here Since I've been gone?, Endless Express, Europalia Festival, Brussels-South station, Brussels, Belgium
^Adler, Laure (2019). The trouble with women artists : reframing the history of art. Viéville, Camille,, Robinson, Kate (English-language ed.). Paris. ISBN978-2-08-020370-0. OCLC1090006696.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)