Contemplative Photography: Seeing Into Winter

Contemplative Photography: Seeing Into Winter

Class - Photography | Available

251 N Spruce St. Winston-Salem, NC 27101 United States
Flex / Conference Room - 214
Beginner to Advanced
12/2/2025-12/23/2025
6:30 PM-8:00 PM EDT on Tue
$120.00
$108.00

Contemplative Photography: Seeing Into Winter

Class - Photography | Available

Winter invites a quieter kind of attention. In this season of stillness and simplicity, we can learn to see more clearly, feel more deeply, and awaken to the hidden beauty of the world around us.

This 4-week contemplative photography course explores winter not just as a backdrop, but as teacher. Each session will offer a blend of mindfulness practice, photographic exploration, and reflective inquiry. We will slow down and open our eyes to the muted colors, stark contrasts, subtle textures, and quiet stories that winter has to tell.

  • Open to all skill levels, this course emphasizes presence over perfection. Bring your camera or smartphone, a sense of curiosity, and a willingness to discover what winter can reveal—both in the landscape and in yourself.
Auman, Timothy
Timothy Auman

I am an ordained lay Buddhist, certified mindfulness teacher, and former university chaplain dedicated to the application of Taoist and Zen thought to the issues of everyday life. As a visual artist, my approach to photography focuses on learning (or perhaps we could say re-learning) how to see. My work is influenced by the Miksang (the Tibetan word for “good eye”) movement, having studied with John McQuade and Miriam Hall for many years. In contemplative photography, we focus on taking the time to actually see, to become aware of and present with what is actually happening in the phenomenal world, and then create an equivalent image with our camera. The main difference between Miksang Contemplative Photography and other forms of photography is that Miksang is based on clear perception before an overlay of thoughts, interpretations, preferences, story lines, likes and dislikes, what we think might make a good image and so forth arise. Meditation, dharma teachings and contemplation are woven into all I teach. If you want to know more about contemplative photography, please sign up for a class.