Gurukula: a millennium old schooling system that has survived with time

Earlier this year, I made several visits to Art of Living International Center in Bangalore to photo-document a school of traditional knowledge: a Gurukula. Here is a collection of images from my visits.

(Below is an easy-to-navigate slideshow of images with captions. If you are reading this in an RSS Reader or over email, the embedded slideshow may not be visible to you. Please click here to see it on the website).

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Zanskar – brilliant star-lit mountain landscapes in the Himalayas

As we drove higher and higher–well above 12,000 feet–there was a visible change in the geographical features. The brown slopes of the mountains that adorned a hat of snow on the peak morphed into all-white walls bifurcated by a rough patch of road that allowed us an access. Below us, at the bottom of the valley, melt-water gushed away, making a long journey into the plains that nurtured the civilization of a billion people. Up here, the only sound of life came from the inhabitants of our own car, save for an occasional yellow-billed chough that flew past or a cuddly-looking marmot that scooted away on our arrival. Glaciers dotted the landscapes, adding more force to the river that skirted past their mouths. The enormous tall massifs covered with snow hurt our eyes, and yet, pleased our souls through a sense of calm and magnanimity effused from them. Someone in the car said, “we have reached heaven”. I could not help but nod silently. I did not want to speak up and break the indulgent muses of my mind.

zanskar landscapes

It was a summer afternoon and we were driving towards Penzi-La, the mighty pass that rose above 14,000 feet to partition the valleys of Suru and Zanskar. I was leading a photography tour comprising a dozen trigger-happy people who were willing to go through any struggle to be a part of this gigantic landscape. For past three days, we had come away from the networked world and were camping amidst high mountains, disconnected from everything else but the grandest showcase of nature. We had traversed in the shadow of Nun and Kun mountains, both massive projections from the ground that climbed well above 20,000 feet, covered in megatonnes of snow that shined in the bright mountain sun.


India through my lens: a collection of 100+ travel photos from India made in more than a decade of travelling across the country

Theyyam at Kannur, Kerala

In the second week of May, I was in Dubai to conduct a workshop and also talk about a few topics during Photography-LIVE Dubai. One of the topics I presented was ‘India through my lens,’ showcasing 100+ images of India’s landscapes, culture and heritage that I had created during more than a decade of my journeys across India. Here is the collection of images that I presented at the event, for your viewing pleasure in one go.

Some or many of these images can also be found on some image-sharing platform that I use, where you can look at more of my work on your favourite image sharing or social platform: facebook, instagram, flickr and 500px.

India through my lens from Arun Bhat

(Note: This is an embedded slide-show. May not be displayed for viewers reading through email subscriptions and RSS feeds. If you can’t see the slideshow, please visit the page on the website: India through my lens.)