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Nicholas Vreeland

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Religion
  
Title
  
Khen Rinpoche

Uncles
  
Thomas Reed Vreeland Jr.

Based in
  
Parents
  
Frederick Vreeland

Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Nicholas Vreeland

School
  
Teacher
  
Khyongla Rato Rinpoche


Nicholas Vreeland wwwabchomecomwpcontentuploads201411NickyVr

Books
  
An Open Heart, Open Heart, An: Practicing Compassion in Everyday Life

Grandparents
  
Diana Vreeland, Thomas Reed Vreeland

Great-grandparents
  
Emily Key Hoffman, Frederick Young Dalziel

Similar People
  

Photographer spotlight nicholas vreeland


Nicholas Vreeland, also known as Rato Khen Rinpoche, Geshe Thupten Lhundup, is a fully ordained Tibetan Buddhist monk who is the abbot of Rato Dratsang Monastery, a 10th century Tibetan Buddhist monastery reestablished in India. Vreeland is also a photographer. He is the son of Ambassador Frederick Vreeland and grandson of Diana Vreeland, the renowned fashion editor.

Contents

Nicholas Vreeland A Monk39s Camera Better Photography

Vreeland spends half of his time in Rato Monastery in India, and the other half in the United States, where he is the Director of Kunkhyab Thardo Ling—The Tibet Center, New York City's oldest Tibetan Buddhist center.

Nicholas Vreeland A New Film Explores Nicky Vreeland39s Shift from Dandy to

In 2014, a documentary film was released about Vreeland, entitled Monk With A Camera.

Nicholas Vreeland The Monk with a Camera An Interview with Khen Rinpoche Nicholas

Address by nicholas vreeland


History

Nicholas Vreeland Monk With A Camera The Life And Journey Of Nicholas Vreeland

Vreeland was born in Geneva, Switzerland in 1954. He also lived in Germany, and Morocco before coming to live in the United States at the age of 13 when his father Frederick Vreeland was assigned to the United States Mission to the United Nations.

Nicholas Vreeland Buddhist Abbot Nicholas Vreeland June 15 2012 Religion Ethics

Vreeland was sent to Groton School in Massachusetts, where he became interested in photography; he became an apprentice to photographers Irving Penn and Richard Avedon, who both worked for Diana Vreeland, Vogue magazine's editor-in-chief.

Nicholas Vreeland Leica Gallery Nicholas Vreeland Adam Marelli Photo

in the early 1970s, Vreeland attended The American University of Paris, subsequently receiving his BA in 1975 from New York University Film School, where he studied film.

In 1977, Vreeland began his studies of Buddhism with Khyongla Rato Rinpoche, a Tibetan lama sent to the West in the early 1960s by the 14th Dalai Lama to help introduce Tibetan culture and religion. On a photographic assignment in India in 1979, Vreeland met the Dalai Lama, and was asked to photograph the Dalai Lama's first trip to North America.

In 1985 Vreeland became a monk and joined Rato Monastery in the Mungod Tibetan Settlement in Karnataka, India, when there were only 27 monks there. The monastic population of Rato has since grown to over one hundred. Vreeland was awarded a Geshe degree, equivalent to a PhD, in 1998, and returned to New York to assist his teacher, Khyongla Rinpoche, and to help run Kunkhyab Thardo Ling—the Tibet Center, which Rinpoche founded. Vreeland also helped raise the funds, in part through offering his photographs for sale, to enable Rato Monastery to build a new monastic campus.

Vreeland has edited two books by the Dalai Lama:

  • An Open Heart: Practicing Compassion in Everyday Life, 2005, which was a New York Times bestseller
  • A Profound Mind, 2011
  • In 2012, His Holiness the Dalai Lama appointed Vreeland abbot of Rato Dratsang, which is one of eleven important Tibetan Government monasteries under His Holiness's authority. The Dalai Lama explained that Vreeland's “special duty [is] to bridge Tibetan tradition and [the] Western world.”

    In May 2014, Vreeland was awarded Honorary Doctorate degrees from The American University of Paris and from John Cabot University in Rome.

    Documentary film

    Monk With A Camera: The Life and Journey of Nicholas Vreeland, is a biographical documentary film about Nicholas Vreeland, directed by Guido Santi and Tina Mascara. The film was released in 2014.

    Photography exhibitions

    An exhibition of twenty of Vreeland's images has traveled to twelve cities around the world, and has raised funds to enable the rebuilding of Rato Monastery in India.

  • "Return to the Roof of the World", Leica Gallery, New York, NY, April 2011; Taipei, Taiwan February 2013. These were photographs taken when Vreeland accompanied Khyongla Rato Rinpoche on his return to the Dagyab district of Tibet.
  • References

    Nicholas Vreeland Wikipedia