


From 2012 to 2021, Adaya Godlevsky and I shared a sincere partnership in both life and art, creating heartfelt multimedia experiences that combined her mastery of music and harp playing with my passion for technology-based art and video art. We worked together with care and curiosity, exploring how human feelings and technology could connect in meaningful ways through live performance and visual art. Our approach was simple: let music guide technology and let technology respond with kindness to human expression.
One piece we created together, "Aqua Alta," utilized AI technology to generate visuals that responded to Adaya's music, demonstrating how technology can truly listen and react to human expression with sensitivity. We performed live video-sound pieces together at places like Beit Reuven Museum in Tel Aviv, Cafe OTO in London, and galleries in Tel Aviv and Berlin, always approaching each performance with openness and respect for the moment. I like to take creative risks, which helped our work grow. Over ten years, we shared our art at many venues and festivals, grateful for the chance to connect with audiences through our combined music and technology. The creative foundation we built together with such care continues to guide my sound art work today, reminding me that the most important part is the human connection behind the technology. The artistic bond we created together showed us that the most beautiful art comes from genuine collaboration between people who care about each other and their craft.
Adaya & Uri
Co-Lab







