kissmiklos & Solinfo
As part of the kissmiklos & Home of Solinfo collaboration, Kiss Miklós’s YOU&ME Valentine’s Day installation is on view at the Home of Solinfo space.
During the collaboration, the artist’s smaller design objects, created with a playful sense of humor and irony, will also be available both in the webshop and in the store, where art and design naturally come together.


kissmiklos (Miklós Kiss)
kissmiklos is a visual artist and designer known for his strong conceptual approach and vibrant playfulness. His works have been exhibited in numerous museums and galleries across Europe and Asia. His practice challenges the traditional boundaries between High Art, Low Art and Design, reflecting on the complex relationships between art, social media, capitalism, and individual perception – all while maintaining a humorous, ironic, and tongue-in-cheek sensibility, often articulated through wordplay and typography.


YOU & ME
YOU&ME explores the insoluble contradiction between shared destiny and individual solitude. The ampersand-shaped (&) object serves as a simultaneous symbol of togetherness and the inevitable isolation that stems from it. The work reflects on the universal experience that even within the tightest of bonds, an indivisible inner loneliness remains. Although visitors share the same piece of "furniture," the inherent characteristics of its form direct their gaze toward their own separate horizons.

kissmiklos (Miklós Kiss)
kissmiklos is a visual artist and designer known for his strong conceptual approach and vibrant playfulness. His works have been exhibited in numerous museums and galleries across Europe and Asia. His practice challenges the traditional boundaries between High Art, Low Art and Design, reflecting on the complex relationships between art, social media, capitalism, and individual perception – all while maintaining a humorous, ironic, and tongue-in-cheek sensibility, often articulated through wordplay and typography.

YOU & ME
YOU&ME explores the insoluble contradiction between shared destiny and individual solitude. The ampersand-shaped (&) object serves as a simultaneous symbol of togetherness and the inevitable isolation that stems from it. The work reflects on the universal experience that even within the tightest of bonds, an indivisible inner loneliness remains. Although visitors share the same piece of "furniture," the inherent characteristics of its form direct their gaze toward their own separate horizons.































