Photography Workshop Varanasi Photography Workshop India Photography Tour Varanasi

Day #1 Update – Varanasi Photography Workshop

(For starters, apologies for missing the daily updates. As they say, the days were just packed!)

 

Picking up from where I left in my previous post – my flight finally left Mumbai at 1:15 p.m., touching down in Varanasi at around close to four. Peter meanwhile had written in saying that he’d grabbed lunch at one of the Lonely Planet recommended joints not too far from the ghats, and was quite – and I’m quoting him here – ‘Overwhelmed’…

I presume he was speaking about the sheer crush of people and the chaos (and not the food) that are part and parcel of Varanasi! 😂

“The trick is not to get overwhelmed because you won’t know what to shoot / point your lens at then. Don’t even think ‘I need to shoot’, because you won’t know where to begin. Just sit, observe and let the impressions and rhythm of the place wash over you. Let it tell you what of it and how to photograph it.”

My advise to him was – as it is to anyone else who find themselves overwhelmed with the visual and other chaos of a place is simply this: “The trick is not to get overwhelmed because you won’t know what to shoot / point your lens at then. Don’t even think ‘I need to shoot’, because you won’t know where to begin. Just sit, observe and let the impressions and rhythm of the place wash over you. Let it tell you what of it and how to photograph it.”

 

The ride from the airport to the hotel was a breeze, well, most of it at least. Travel time between the airport and city has been considerably reduced thanks to road-widening and several flyovers. Traffic in the city is another matter altogether; it took me as much as fifteen minutes to clear a stretch of road measuring just fifty meters or so, but then, that’s Varanasi for you – some things never change, and one really can’t expect the oldest continuously inhabited place on the planet to change much. And before I forget, let me add that I had to let go my cab and walk the last quarter of a kilometer to the hotel thanks to a roadblock the cops decided to enforce that day, the “better to manage traffic”; Hah!, as if that’s possible in Varanasi!

Got into the hotel at 5:35, met Peter in the lobby. Checked in, got up to my room and was down again in a few minutes, my camera gear in tow. Both Peter and I were putting up in the same hotel, strategically chosen as it was just a five or so minute walk from the ghats, which is where we were now headed for the evening aarti (worship ceremony) of the river Ganges.

 

No sooner had we reached the ghats that we met up with Aparna (a past-participant of my Art Of Seeing Photography Workshop) from Mumbai. Aparna – who was there with some of her friends – has an ancestral house in Varanasi, and on hearing that Peter and I were visiting, was kind enough to extend us an invite to dinner, one which was gracefully accepted. Some small – and not-so-small – talk followed; notable among the latter was Aparna pointing to the full-moon cresting the horizon and remarking “Tonight’s a full-moon, but there’s no way – what with both the scale of the aarti ceremony and the tonal contrast – that one can photograph it with the aarti...”

We agreed to meet up after the ceremony was over, and I guided Peter to a few spots from where I knew he’d get the photographs that matter. Looking around and giving him a run-down of what to expect and what to keep his eyes peeled out for, I suddenly blinked. Hard. And then I go “You know Pete, maybe we can’t photograph both together, but I do think we can photograph one in the context of the other…”

 

“Tonight’s a full-moon, but there’s no way – what with both the scale of the aarti ceremony and the tonal contrast – that one can photograph it with the aarti…”

Well Aparna, this one’s for you! 😊

The rest of the photographic part of the evening was spent in meeting up with the rest of our workshop participants – Tom and Sabrina,  both from Germany – and photographing the aarti ceremony.

I’d decided that I’d be shooting  with my Canon EOS 5,  tonight; given the coverage of the lens (100-400) I restricted myself to making some close-up story-telling images of the ceremony, as well as the people attending them. Image thumbnails are cropped; click on an image to see it large.

We wrapped up the evening with a boat ride to Kedar Ghat from where we headed to Aparna’s home for a delicious dinner and outstanding hospitality. I’d planned to call it an early night, but that was not to be; it was close to ten (or was it later?) by the time we got back to our hotel – the next day was going to be a long one!

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Varanasi Photography Workshop Update: Going, going, gone!

So here I am on Day #1 of The Gathering Of The Seers – Varanasi Photography Workshop, and I think this image says it all.

No, I’m not in Varanasi yet, this photograph is from a previous trip to Varanasi that I just decided to dig out of my archives. Is it apt? You bet!

For those unfamiliar with hindu religious customs, this is a photo of a religious ceremony in remembrance of the dead. It’s one of the innumerable sights that one is likely to come across along the river ghats.

So why am I posting this, and now? Well, I’m stuck at the airport in Mumbai what with my Air India flight to Varanasi now standing delayed by three frigging hours! The original flight time was 10:30, then pushed to 11:20, then 12:40, and now stands at 1:30. Owing to crew being unavailable before that if you please!

Well, I’m never going to fly AI again ever. But if you ask me, the ailing airline that AI is, I really think it’s gonna join the ranks of the also-ran soon. I think the airline is a gone case – going, going, soon to be gone!

On a lighter note, Peter from Mumbai has reached Varanasi, and messaged me to say that the cab driver at the airport tried to talk him into sampling Banarasi paan, and offered to take him shopping for sarees within minutes of Pete hopping into that-there cab! Ah, Varanasi! How I love thee!

Well that’s it for now, more updates to come. And that image – – apt, don’t you think?

Varanasi: Long Time, No See

Yep, as the title says. Put it down to family commitments, but it’s been a while. Well, that’s going to change over the next few days as that most incredible of location beckons!

Packing (“packing-shacking” as the Delhiites would put it) here for The Gathering Of The Seers 2018 – Varanasi Photography Workshop; begins tommorow. Four amazing days packed with photographing at the most amazing place on the planet, photo-review sessions, discussions and tips galore on tips and techniques on the Art and Science of Travel Photography, Photo-editing, and Visual Storytelling!

Watch this space for daily updates and photos!

Varanasi Photography Workshop Varanasi Photography Tour

The Gathering Of The Seers 2018 – Varanasi

VARANASI PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP

The Gathering
Of
The Seers 2018

Begins in

Days
Hours
Minutes
Seconds

The Gathering Of The Seers, 2018
Varanasi Photography Workshop

One location. Countless photographic opportunities. One mentor. Packed with learning. Eight Art of Seeing Workshop Participants. Fancy being one of them?

 

A 4-day guided, mentored photography conclave (exclusive to participants of my Art Of Seeing Photography Workshop) to the oldest, continuously inhabited place on the planet. Packed with daily photo-walks, discussions, lectures, invaluable tips,  image editing and review sessions and priceless travel photography and story-telling insights, this is an unrivaled opportunity for participants of The Art of Seeing Photography Workshop to put all their learning to the test and  further their artistic journey.

Where & When

Where: Another planet.
Because Varanasi is just that!

When:
December 22nd- 25th, 2018


Costs

₹ 12,000/-
(for Art of Seeing Workshop Participants only; if you aren't one, you can avail of this special price by attending The Art Of Seeing Workshop)
Includes cost of tuition, guided walks, and one boat ride. Costs do not include your travel, accommodation, meals, refreshments, laundry, or your bribe-the-local-politician-to-get-out-of-jail-free card.

Typical Itinerary

Day 1 – December 22nd: Arrive in Varanasi on the 22nd (or earlier). We meet up in the suite of your mentor at 4 pm for an introductory discussion about the evening shoot and tips on how to go about the process of photographing the Ganga Aarti. Head to the river ghats by around five, making photographs of the throngs of people there. Familiarize yourself with the location and vantage points before the ceremony begins. Evening photography of the ceremony followed by discussion of the evening session and a prelude to the next morning’s shoot over dinner at El-cheapo Varanasi Bhojan Bhandar (I’m sure there’s one by that name!); each-one-pay-for-somebody-else; what a great way to grab your dinner for free!

 

Day 2 – December 23rd: Converge at our designated meet-up point before dawn.  Make images of arriving pilgrims before taking a boat ride (four pax per boat), photographing the river and the worshipers along its banks. Then we’ll have a walk along a section of the ghats before returning to our respective hotels / hole-in-the-wall pads for breakfast. Later, meet up at your mentor’s suite for image-reviews and editing, followed by a presentation on Travel Photography and the Art of  Visual Storytelling. Break for lunch, meet up after that for a walk around the streets of Varanasi. The evening sees us photographing the worship ceremony again; you’ll be more prepared now what with the previous evening’s experience and all the stuff you’ll have learned today. Discussion over dinner regarding lessons learned and experience gleaned.

 

Day 3 – December 24th: Repeat first sentence from Day 1 above. We’ll spend the morning exploring and photographing the length of the ghats on foot, photographing activities as they unfold there – a very different point-of-view (as you know, I don’t use that term interchangeably with ‘Perspective’!) from the previous day’s shoot from the boat. Break for breakfast by the time the sun gets harsh. Make your way back to your mentor’s suite for more image reviews and editing. Break for lunch, then more editing and reviews until 4 pm.

 

I then “cry ‘havoc’, and let slip the seers” (with due apologies to old Julius C. You are literally on your own for the evening aarti today; alone as in you receive no tips from me from this moment. Not only do you have to rely on your own instincts, but there’s an additional challenge: I want you to photograph the aarti so that it’s something more than an aarti! Now how on earth do you do that? That’s up to you, but I’ll have slipped in a few pointers before I cry havoc!

 

Day 4 – December 25th: Your assignments for today are twofold, and stem from two observations of mine. (a) In this day and age , of places there are a glut of photographs, of place there are few. And (b) in an age where everything has been photographed, the only unique thing you can bring to photographing a place is your self. So I’ll cry havoc again, and let loose the seers. Walk the ghats, take a boat ride. Or maybe just sit and observe. Whatever be your choice – your images – no matter how few – should reflect you and your feelings. They should begin to be uniquely You!

 

Over lunch we discuss your impressions , feelings and learning and discoveries; the image reviews of today are left for once we get back to Mumbai. We end at 4 PM, the workshop’s at a close. But for you it’s a new beginning….

 

I once casually remarked that Seeing is just the beginning. The camera is just a tool to begin to see. For those willing, it can take one further…

 

Ready to go from Seeing to Being? If so, email me at info @ stopsoflight.com now! Seats are limited, and are strictly on a first-come-first-served basis.

 

(Again, please note that this particular workshop is available only  to my Art Of Seeing Workshop participants)

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