Project Overview
The art project LoveSharing was born from my personal feeling that the world around us is rapidly becoming digital. We communicate more and more through screens, algorithms and processes influence our decisions, and artificial intelligence is becoming our best friend and advisor. In the process of all this, we gradually lose simple human warmth and empathy, without which a person cannot truly be human. We forget — or are intentionally made to forget — what love is and where it exists.
Simple, everyday human love — the emotions and feelings that make us alive.
Concept
At the center of my art project (performance) is the Heart.
I took the classical anatomical form and rethought it, transforming it into a more modern, almost “digital” object. The bionic form of my sculpture looks smooth, cold, as if made of glass — a symbol of a new time, an image of the modern heart in a world of algorithms and AI.
But for me, it is important that, despite this transformation, the heart remains a heart — with love and warmth inside it as the foundation of human communication.
In the project, I combine sculpture, performance, and photography.
We see only hands — living, warm, human hands. I consciously exclude the body and the face to create a universal image.
In the history of art, the hand has often acted as an independent carrier of meaning. In Renaissance painting, gestures conveyed emotions, intentions, and inner states, and in religious iconography, even a single hand could signify the presence of a higher power.
In the modern world, the hand is a mediator between algorithms, the keyboard, AI, and the human. We type prompts, send texts, and interact with the external world, in most cases, through our hands.
In my project, the hand becomes a boundary between the digital and the human — the only carrier of warmth, tactility, and live contact. They slowly touch this cold heart, explore it, embrace it, and try to warm it. For me, this is a very important moment — a moment of tactility that cannot be replaced by any technologies, algorithms, and especially AI.
Realization
Light plays a key role. I am inspired by the dramaturgy of light of Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio and the photography of Irving Penn and Annie Leibovitz. Through the contrast of light and shadow, I want to emphasize the difference between the living and the artificial, between warmth and cold.
The performance consists of three acts:
From the Author
For me, this project is a reminder.
That no matter how the world changes, no matter how digital it becomes, we must still remain human — with a heart filled with love.
And we need touch, attention, and warmth from each other.
And perhaps it is through such simple things that we can preserve the most important thing — the ability to love.



