I Feel Your Pain
Details
MaterialGallery
single-channel videoVarious Small Fires
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This image appears to be a still from a film or television production. The scene depicts two people, a man and a woman, seated in a crowded movie theater. The woman is raising her fist in a gesture of defiance or empowerment, while the man appears to be leaning towards her in a supportive manner. The lighting and framing of the shot create a sense of energy and tension, suggesting a dramatic or emotionally charged moment. The overall style and composition of the image seem to reflect a cinematic approach, with the use of chiaroscuro lighting and the placement of the subjects within the frame. Without any contextual information about the specific work, it's difficult to ascertain the broader artistic intentions or thematic significance of this particular scene. However, the visual cues and the emotional resonance of the image suggest that it may be exploring themes of social or political activism, or perhaps the dynamics of interpersonal relationships. ...

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Liz Magic Laser
Artist
Liz Magic Laser
B.1981, American

Situating her work in public spaces such as movie theatres, bank vestibules and newsrooms, multimedia and performance artist Liz Magic Laser explores how politics, psychology and technology affect human instincts. Often collaborating with actors, doctors, political strategists, motorcycle gang members and her own audience, Lazer’s practice echoes the concept of epic theatre coined by Bertolt Brecht. In the project I Feel Your Pain (2011), actors were conducting staged conversations with the audience in the movie theatre. The actors’ dialogues were appropriated from speeches and exchanges made by politicians and were adapted by Laser to reveal the theatricality of her source material, resembling domestic dispute, and blending public and private lives. The artist’s focus on theatrical tactics, and questions of power dynamics inherent in performativity produces provocative and engaging scripted performances that reveal the psychological underpinnings that operate in corporate and political cultures. Written by Goldsmiths CCA ...

Liz Magic Laser: Artworks
In Real Life
I Feel Your Pain
I Feel Your Pain (Collage #8)
Liz Magic Laser
I Feel Your Pain (Collage #8), 2011
50.8 x 40.64cm
The Invisible Cube
Liz Magic Laser
The Invisible Cube, 2013
10.16 x 10.16 x 10.16cm
Public Relations / Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Liz Magic Laser
Public Relations / Öffentlichkeitsarbeit, 2013
The Armory Show Focus Group
Liz Magic Laser
The Armory Show Focus Group, 2013
Certificate of Stock Share in The Armory Show
Liz Magic Laser
Certificate of Stock Share in The Armory Show, 2013
33.02 x 40.64cm
Of Gesture Relative to Its Modifying Apparatus
Liz Magic Laser
Of Gesture Relative to Its Modifying Apparatus, 2015
25.4 x 15.24 x 13.97cm
Inflective Medallion
Liz Magic Laser
Inflective Medallion, 2015
119.38 x 119.38 x 0.64cm
Kiss And Cry
Liz Magic Laser
Kiss And Cry, 2015
33.02 x 76.2cm
Handle / Poignée
Various Small Fires
Gallery
Various Small Fires
Los Angeles, Seoul, Dallas

Various Small Fires (Los Angeles /Dallas /Seoul) began as a series of conversations with artists and curators in Esther Kim Varet’s Venice Beach kitchen while working on her doctoral dissertation. VSF debuted in Hollywood as an official gallery in 2015 with a roster of artists and its current Johnston MarkLee Architects-designed building. The Hollywood gallery contains three exhibition spaces, a unique sound corridor, and an outdoor gallery. VSF’s exhibition program explores several curatorial lines: climate, equality, and an international conversation. The gallery is known for offering artists debut shows, creating intergenerational conversations among the artists on its roster, and solidifying artists’ legacies within art history. In 2019, VSF opened a second location in the Hannam neighbourhood of Seoul, South Korea, followed recently this Spring by VSFs third outpost in Dallas, Texas. While Varet has very personal connections to both locations, they are also superlative art communities. These expansions emphasise the gallery’s commitment to innovation and global dialogue in the twenty-first century. In 2021, VSF became a member of the Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA). ...

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