HD double projection video installation, colour
edition of 5 + 1 AP
He doesn’t know you don’t love him is a double projection video installation that explores the relationship between drama and performance, ideology and subjectivity through the acting exercises developed by Sanford Meisner.
It was originally shown under the title Living truthfully under imaginary circumstances that also included two monitors displaying archival footage of Meisner and excerpts of Hollywood movies featuring actors trained according to his method.
Meisner’s techniques paradoxically deploy an unnatural training routine of intense repetition and observational feedback to stimulate ‘authentic’ emotion and spontaneity in performance. They remain highly influential on American cinema and drama today.
The installation interrogates the meaning of ‘emotional truthfulness’ in post-modern naturalism and its blurring of the distinction between dramatic artifice and seemingly ‘primal’, ‘human’ impulses, whilst simultaneously foregrounding the hypnotic, open-ended, and affective force of Meisner’s method.
German-born Anja Kirschner and Greek-born David Pano (both now live and work in London) have been collaborating on dense, conceptual projects, spanning multiple genres, since the mid-2000s. Using computer-generated imagery, video, and installation, the duo examines how various technologies—motion capture, currency, routinization, and others—change the ways in which we perceive the world, other people, popular culture, history, and literary tropes. The duo is particularly interested in the nature of performance, use of surrogates and actors, as well as narrative construction on the whole.