There are some places that don’t just offer space but create it. Space to pause. To reconnect with your hands. To pay attention.
Dharamkot Studio, nestled in the pine-covered hills above Dharamshala, is one of those rare places. A pottery and ceramics studio built on the philosophy of slow living and quiet making, it invites you to step away from the rush and into your rhythm. For many, five days here feel like a reset. Not just creatively, but energetically. Here’s what to expect when you spend time on a retreat at Dharamkot Studio.
“The instructors were incredibly patient and knowledgeable … this was the perfect creative escape combined with inner peace.”
— Shambhavi U.
Day 1: Arrival & Slowing Down
You arrive in the afternoon, perhaps after a winding drive through the hills, your senses just beginning to tune to mountain air and cedar trees. The studio is just a short walk from the center of Dharamkot village, yet already the noise falls away.
There’s chai waiting, warm introductions and the gentle hum of the wheel spinning somewhere in the distance. Your accommodation is simple, private, grounded. The air smells of woodsmoke and rain. Check–in before 2 PM, take your time to settle in, visit the studio, meet other people and attend your first pottery session from 4 PM – 7 PM.
You’re not here to produce. You’re here to settle. To listen.
Day 2: Clay Meets Hand
Your first full day begins in the studio. The instructors gentle, grounded, and deeply experienced introduce the clay not as a material to be conquered, but as something to build a relationship with.
You learn the basics of hand-building or wheel throwing, depending on your focus. Some participants have never touched clay before. Others come with years of practice. It doesn’t matter.
The pace is slow. Between shaping and trimming, there’s time to watch the clouds drift past the glass windows, or step outside for tea. The rhythm is yours to find.
You begin to understand something simple and powerful: when your hands are busy, your mind can rest.
Day 3: Process Over Product
Days flow gently. Today might begin with a guided nature walk or hike to Prayer Flag Point, where mountain views and fluttering flags offer quiet prompts. After lunch, it’s back to the studio. There’s a shift on the third day. You’re no longer thinking about what you’re making you’re just making.
Maybe your piece doesn’t turn out how you imagined. That’s okay. The studio encourages freedom over perfection. The instructors remind you that clay has its own memory, its own will.
Around you, people move in a quiet flow. Some are sculpting. Others carving. One is painting her piece with oxides, another practicing trimming on the wheel. There are moments of shared laughter, and others where silence fills the room like breath.
In the evening, some walk down to McLeod Ganj, others stay back for sunset and storytelling. The days stretch and soften. Something in you unclenches.
Day 4: Reflection and Detail
You return to your work now with greater ease. The form is there, and you’re attending to the small things the curve of a handle, the layering of slip, the feel of the surface in your palm.
Maybe you experiment with texture, or learn about more techniques. Maybe you simply sit with your work and notice what it’s telling you.
Outside, the mountains remain. The forest speaks in rustles. Inside, the kiln hums, warming up for the final firing.
Today, you notice how much your sense of time has changed.
Day 5: Letting Go
The final day is part-work, part-celebration. There’s a quiet pride in what you’ve made not because it’s perfect, but because it came from presence. From effort. From being here.
There’s space to share your pieces, if you’d like. Some speak about their process, others simply hold up a mug or sculpture and smile. It’s enough.
You clean your space. Pack your things. Write a note in the studio guestbook.
Day 6: Checkout and Carrying It Forward
The morning is slow and gentle. You wake up with mountain light in your room and a quiet knowing in your body something has shifted. After breakfast, it’s time to pack, take one last look at your studio space, and say your goodbyes.
There’s no rush. The studio team helps arrange your departure, whether you’re heading down to the bus stand or walking back into town for a slower exit.
You leave not with a suitcase full of finished pieces, but with something far less visible and far more lasting a deeper connection to your hands, to stillness and to yourself.
This retreat doesn’t demand mastery. It offers space to encounter clay and, often, a version of yourself you hadn’t met yet.
So, What Can You Expect?
- A welcoming community of artists, travelers, and seekers
- Expert guidance in pottery, sculpting, and glazing
- Nutritious meals shared in warm company
- Time in nature, stillness, and daily creative flow
- A break from performance—this is about process, not pressure
- Day tour of McLeod Ganj
- Yoga, meditation and sound healing sessions
- And most of all: a quiet, steady return to yourself
At Dharamkot Studio, art is not about achievement it’s about attention. The clay doesn’t ask for skill. It asks for presence. So if you’re feeling the pull to step away, to make with your hands, and to be held by mountains while you do it this is your place.
Come as you are. Leave as more of yourself. Book your retreat here.