Dea Khalvashi (1996, Georgia) is an installation artist working in Brussels, Belgium. Her practice is grounded in an early experience of displacement and separation. This rupture has shaped her narratives on movement, tradition, and piety, and her sensitivity to the fragile ways people stay connected — through gestures, rituals, faith, and technology.

Her work often returns to these points of disconnection and repair, exploring how belonging is built through acts of translation — between languages, between bodies, and between screens. Her practice materialises in installations that merge digital imagery, light, sound, and found objects, reflecting on the spiritual and spatial dimensions of technology in contemporary life.

Dea has exhibited in cultural spaces internationally, including Gallery Conceal Shibuya, Tokyo, Zsenne Art Lab, Recyclart in Brussels, Belgium. Her installations have also taken shape in unconventional spaces, such as rual landscapes of Itoshima, Japan, and laundromats scattered around the city.

A complete list of exhibitions and CV available upon request.