New East Digital Archive

Emotional First Aid: this designer is recreating the experience of a hug

Emotional First Aid: this designer is recreating the experience of a hug

24 March 2020
Images: courtesy of Elena Lašaitė

For many of us since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, the comfort of physical contact has suddenly been replaced by faltering familiar faces on a screen. Yet even before the lockdowns and self-isolation imposed by governments to fight the coronavirus outbreak, human social interactions had slowly been reduced by information technologies. But can a hug ever be replaced?

This is the main question at the heart of Lithuanian designer Elena Lašaitė‘s work. Her project Emotional First Aid — created in 2018 during her studies at the Vilnius Academy of Arts — explores the idea of emotional safety in a society tainted by loneliness and excessive information.

“It seems that health and safety is often understood just as a big pile of rules and regulations,” Lašaitė told The Calvert Journal. “There is nothing in place to make people feel emotionally safe. Even more so now, during the Covid-19 pandemic, it is very important to talk about emotional safety, and not just rules of behaviour.”

Inspired by the idea that human contact could be simulated and replaced, just like face-to-face human relations have been replaced by virtual interactions, Lašaitė created a substitute for physical emotional comfort. Rather than being critical of how the online space has taken over our lives, Lašaitė says that digital innovation to promote emotional comfort is something not to be afraid of, but, rather, to embrace — just like the Emotional First Aid vest.

Based on the design of safety equipment, Lašaitė‘s neon orange vest is not meant to save you from a shipwreck, but instead to gently squeeze you and provide the emotional comfort you’d get from a hug.

Read more

Emotional First Aid: this designer is recreating the experience of a hug

A tower block-inspired design studio wants to give you a portable home away from home

Emotional First Aid: this designer is recreating the experience of a hug

A Georgian design studio invites you to destroy their Soviet bus stop-inspired benches

Emotional First Aid: this designer is recreating the experience of a hug

Beleaf: Slovakian designer turns fallen leaves into eco-chair