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| Water is inherently rhythmic in nature and the medium in which life takes form...
The meandering and sinuous patterns water weaves enliven and restore its vital properties...
Flowform scultures emerged from this understanding of water, and reveal its rhythmic quality, which no other technology bestows upon water...
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"Flowform technology is to water what Biodynamic agriculture is to soil" -Peter Proctor
Flowform technosculptures have a multitude of Applications and benefits. From landscape and interior design, to agriculture and industrial mixing, flowform technology is becoming widely recognized as a powerful and dynamic tool for treating fluids of all kinds.
Invented by English sculptor John Wilkes in the early seventies, flowform water features are designed on the principle that water is inherently rhythmic in nature. Water continually seeks to move in meandering and sinuous patterns that enable it to cleanse and re-energize itself. The incorporation of oxygen and other vital elements is a crucial process that is at its ideal state in a flowform. It has been observed that pulsation and spiral flow is water’s natural state, and this is transferred into the living organisms it has birthed. The steady coherent rhythm is the signature of flowform technology, unique in the realm of water treatment.

In collaboration with mathematician, George Adams, and flow scientist Theodore Schwenk (author of Sensitive Chaos<), John Wilkes helped to demonstrate water’s inner nature. These water pioneers were exploring path-curve surfaces, the mathematical proportions of organic form and development. Growth, metamorphosis, and evolution all derive their patterns from these path-curve surfaces. Organs, bones, organisms, and whole ecosystems are able to maintain a higher state of health and vitality the closer they adhere to their respective “blue-prints”. Water is the medium for these surfaces as it continually strives to flow on a path curve. The question posed was:
“if we could allow water to experience such an ideal (path-curve) surface, would that water then acquire a higher potential to build organically, to support organic life-processes?”
The evidence over the past 30 years of flowform research has demonstrated that there is indeed an increase in water quality when worked with in this way.