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Thoughts on Water - The Photographs

02 Jun 2006
Ever since the movie "What The Bleep Do We Know?" Masaru Emoto and his water crystal photographs have gone from relative obscurity to Best Seller. The Japanese researcher is currently touring the…

Ever since the movie "What The Bleep Do We Know?" Masaru Emoto and his water crystal photographs have gone from relative obscurity to Best Seller.

The Japanese researcher is currently touring the world explaining his photographic documentation of water crystals. Stunning examples of these will be on display in the Paramount Theatre bar and foyer from June 11th. Ever since the movie "What The Bleep Do We Know?" Masaru Emoto and his water crystal photographs have gone from relative obscurity to Best Seller.

The Japanese researcher is currently touring the world explaining his photographic documentation of water crystals. Stunning examples of these will be on display in the Paramount Theatre bar and foyer from June 11th.Dr Emoto will also reveal photographs of New Zealand water samples when he makes his only New Zealand appearance at the Paramount Theatre in Wellington on Wednesday 5th July from 6.30pm. Tickets are $25 in advance available from the Paramount box office.

Dr Emoto's research involves freezing droplets of water and examining them under a Dark Field Microscope with high speed photographic capabilities. Pristine mountain streams and springs create beautifully-formed geometric designs in their crystalline patterns. Polluted and toxic water from industrial and populated areas as well as stagnated water from water pipes and storage dams show definitively distorted and randomly formed crystalline structures.

He has been visually documenting these molecular changes and his work clearly demonstrates the receptiveness of water to its environment. Dr Emoto also discovered that the water appeared to "change its expression" when it was exposed to focused intentions through music and even written or spoken words. See the amazing results at the Paramount, Courtenay Place from 11th June - 5th July 2006.