But what's really going on in this artist's mind? Well, aside from the wild and thought-provoking worlds she projects onto her compositions, Loli has a series of philosophies regarding art that might not be so readily gleaned from her work. For one, Loli gives away her art, which may seem especially perplexing to other artists who try to make a living with their artwork. "I believe that art loses its true value when it becomes fully commercial, because the artist then tries to please the latest visual fashion or the wishes of his customers. How am I supposed to describe to you who I am, when that has a price? It's an oxymoron. Art should be shared freely." But weren't some of the greatest artworks throughout history the result of an attempt to please the patron? Like Michelangelo and Brunelleschi, for example, who had, to a certain extent, to satisfy the tastes of their Medici and papal patrons? Well, now we live in a different age. An age where tools like computers and the internet allow for anyone to become an artist. But because today there is so much, as I would term, artistic inflation, it makes the dynamics infinitely more complex for an artist to become recognised.