Art of Looking with Gautham Manohar
A photo walk without cameras that opens the eye of your mind.
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Your phone library is full. Your cloud space is probably choking too. We want to post pictures that get us more likes, more shares, more mentions. But to get noticed, you need to notice first.
Learn to see, learn to observe, to spot a picture. It’s not a photography class, it’s an observation space. It’s a photo walk without cameras.
It’s not about being a photographer. It’s about tuning in and noticing the world around and the delights it holds.
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A new way to see.
A new understanding of self based on what you noticed.
Turn seeing into looking into observing.
An immersive quiet way to surprise yourself.
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You are overwhelmed with visual sensory overload
You want to tune-in more, notice more, but don’t know where to start
You’re looking to change your perspective about your surroundings forever, wherever you are.
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What’s inside:
1 live 90-minute guided observation walk with Gautham Manohar
Prompts and tips to help you observe.
An introspective walk that helps rekindle your love for your surroundings
A chance to meet fellow observers and lovers of life
Workshop Breakdown:
Part 1 — Spot It
Start with a part of nature you usually just walk past and write what you see.Part 2 — Name It
Give it a name, form, and tone. Make it real.Part 3 — Write It
Fill your pages, write down your feelings about what you see and how it makes you feel. -
This isn’t a photography walk.
This isn’t a journaling session.
It’s a way to turn your surroundings into inspirations. -
$29.99/-
Includes:
✔Live guided walk
✔Prompts and tips to observe
✔A knack you can reuse whenever things feel too much
About Gautham
Gautham is an observer of life first and a photographer second. He uses his camera to speak on his behalf, to show the world as he experiences it. After spending 13 years in the field of architecture/hospitality photography, he has now dedicated himself to documenting India’s rich, but fast vanishing landscapes. He has exhibited across the country and continues his expeditions into the farthest corners of India to capture it in ways that change how we view places we visit but never really see.