An urban installation about kindness and connection
Send Me a Kiss is an urban art installation that transforms a simple, intimate gesture into a shared public experience. Suspended between ground and sky, a pair of sculptural lips unfolds into wings—an emblem of tenderness given form, light enough to rise, strong enough to travel.
The kiss, usually exchanged in private, becomes here a universal language. It is not romanticized, but humanized: a sign of care, reassurance, and presence. In a city often defined by speed, distance, and anonymity, the installation invites a pause—a moment of softness in the everyday flow.
The wings suggest movement and transmission. Kindness does not remain still; it travels, passes from one person to another, crossing boundaries of age, culture, and belief. The gesture is small, but its impact is expansive. A kiss sent is a connection made.
Placed in an urban setting, the work creates an emotional landmark rather than a monumental one. It does not dominate the space; it listens to it. Passersby encounter the sculpture unexpectedly, becoming participants rather than spectators. The installation speaks quietly, yet its message is clear: tenderness belongs in public space.
Send Me a Kiss proposes an alternative reading of the city—not only as a site of function and movement, but as a place for empathy, vulnerability, and shared humanity. It is an invitation to reconnect, to acknowledge one another, and to remember that even the lightest gestures can carry meaning far beyond themselves.