A former sculpture likened to "Man and Woman" is an 8-meter-high movable steel sculpture made by sculptor "Georgia" located in batumi, a coastal city in Georgia, Republic of Georgia. The statues are modeled after a Muslim teenager, Ali, and a Georgian princess, Nino. It tells the touching story of two protagonists who are later forced to separate due to the invasion of the Soviets.

Ali and Nino love each other, but due to different religious beliefs and family backgrounds, they have repeatedly encountered walls on the road of love. At the end of the novel, Ali dies in the war and the two are separated by the Invasion of the Soviet Union. The book has been translated into more than thirty editions and has also been adapted into a film.
Tamara Kvesitadze tells the story with moving sculptures that, in just ten minutes, show acquaintances, acquaintances, love, and separations between lovers. For the viewer, this intuitive form of expression is more directly striking. Ten minutes later, two quiet sculptures remain on the seashore, relatively speechless but full of affection.
The sculptures begin to walk against each other at 7 p.m. each day until the two meet, give each other a short hug, and then hurry away, turning their backs. The whole process of love, union, and separation is completed in just 10 minutes. The device was designed in 2007, but was not completed until 2010, when it was renamed Ali and Nino.
This romantic and creative statue was originally intended to express the love and pain in the history of human development, but for ordinary people, what they see is more of the process of love, "we meet, we laugh, and the last moment of separation comes", such a poignant love story, I don't know how many idiots touch the tears of love.