Waterage

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Water Age


Thoughts Photography Zkill

Words Zkill

Graphics Zkill

of

Water Age

Water Age, at its core, is about lost connections, and new ones. It concerns itself with time, and its effect on our relaionship with water. It reflects on the journey of water through the ages, from our measure. It scrutinizes the environment and forms in which water exists with us today, while looking back at how it was before, in a desperate attempt to magnify its transient nature in every sense.


WATER This is how ‘water’ was written in ancient egyptian hieroglyphs. It is the direct reference for early non-pictographic writing systems


YU This is the Oracle bone script writing for ‘yu’, the chinese character for rain


みず MI ZU

This is how ‘water’ is written and pronounced in kun yomi (native japanese read)


MAYIM This is ‘water’ in Hebrew language. It is based upon the 13th alphabet, ‘Mem’ (m), which in turn was derived from egyptian hieroglyphics


BAN NYU This is how ‘Water’ is written in Hanacaraka, an ancient javanse script based on a poem about 2 warriors


MEM The Phoenicians took the egyptian hieroglyph for ‘water’ and simplified it, naming it ‘Mem’, their word for water


PAANI This is how we write ‘water’ in standard hindu today


MAK ‘Mak’ represents water in arabic. It constitutes the characters ‘meem’,’ alif’ and ‘ain’, of which ‘meem’ derives itself from phoenician alphabet, ‘mem’ which represents water


물 MUL

This is how ’water’ is represented in Korean (Hangul). Hangul is widely classified as a Language Isolate, one that has no demonstrable derivation from other languages


MIM This is how ‘water’ was written in Aramaic. Derived from Phoenician script, it is the direct ancestor of modern Hebrew and Arabic script


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