Moses Hacmon | |
Birth Name: | Moshe Hacmon |
Birth Date: | 29 October 1977 |
Birth Place: | Tel Aviv, Israel |
Children: | 2 |
Alma Mater: | Avni Institute of Art and Design Technion – Israel Institute of Technology Southern California Institute of Architecture |
Notable Works: | Faces of Water |
Relatives: | Hila Klein (sister)[1] Ethan Klein (brother-in-law)[2] |
Website: | https://www.facesofwater.com/ |
Moses Hacmon (born October 29, 1977) is an Israeli collaborative artist, designer and photographer.[3] [4] He is best known for his work Faces of Water, a photography project focused on capturing the movement of water and for co-hosting the Just Trish Podcast with his wife, Trisha Paytas.
Moshe (Moses) Hacmon was born in Tel Aviv, Israel, immigrating to the US in 2002. He studied cinematography and fine art at the Avni Institute of Art and Design and attended the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. In 2006, he completed his Bachelor of Architecture from the Southern California Institute of Architecture with AIA honors.[5] [6]
Hacmon married American internet personality Trisha Paytas in December 2021, the couple currently live in Los Angeles.[7] In February 2022, Paytas announced that she was pregnant with her first child.[8] Their first child, Malibu Barbie Paytas-Hacmon, was born in September 2022.[9] In December 2023, Paytas announced that she was pregnant with her second daughter, to be named Elvis.[10]
A central focus of Hacmon's career has been the study of water's composition, properties, and movement, which led him to develop a photographic technique, Faces of Water.
Inspired by movement of water, Hacmon uses nano-film technology to captures water's invisible forms.[11] Kyle VanHemert of Wired explains Hacmon's technique uses a special type of film with a layer of liquid iron that "records the movement of the water itself".[12]
In an interview with VoyageLA, Hacmon describes Faces of Water, as "part art, part science, part spiritual awakening." In 2013, Hacmon's art exhibition Faces of Water was first displayed by The Hub LA, in the Arts District in Downtown Los Angeles.