Marie Losier’s laughter is like shattering glass—the kind that breaks when a whole lot of glass shatters all at once. It’s the sound of a pyramid of glasses crashing down from the sideboard because someone tripped (or maybe was pushed). It’s a laugh full of joy, and it’s a laugh fraught with disaster. Everything Marie Losier films, edits, shoots, draws, sculpts, dreams, says, sews, unsews, undoes, or patches together is likewise made up of joy and catastrophe. The catastrophe that makes joy strange, unsettling, dangerous, and the joy that turns the catastrophe into its own milk, butter, and sugar. Everything that is shot eventually drills a hole and shapes something, by dint of being shot. Shooting makes holes. Marie Losier shoots and makes holes, using the camera as a punch. But what does she hole? Time, reality, her own nightmares: everything. Everything is a shot, therefore, everything is a hole. Keyholes (a story of the eye), stitching holes (it’s Braille), sutures and holes in the film reel. Holes in the colors of drawings, drained half-white. Holes in death and holes in the trunk (the tree big cunt and love buttholes ). A spiritualist record player and an extra turn of the question—what question?

Marie Losier
Anouk, 2026
Simon enceinte
pen and watercolor on paper
84 x 42 cm

Marie Losier
Oui!, 2026
Victor Zebo
pen, watercolor and collage on paper
100 x 58 cm
