Post on 18-Jan-2016
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Composition 1In this presentation we will look
at some basic ‘rules’ of composition.
Higher Photography
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CompositionThe word composition means combining or 'putting together’ parts to form a whole.
Composition can apply to many works of human endeavour including music and writing – in fact anything that is arranged or ‘put together’ using conscious thought.
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Rule of Thirds
Divide the image into thirds as shown – If the main visual components (things in the image) lie near the lines then the image often tends to look ‘right’.
[Remember, rules are there to be broken - once you understand and can follow them!]
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Which one do you prefer?
Which image more closely follows the rule of thirds?
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Gary Winogrand
Sometimes an image does not follow the rule of thirds exactly, but the main visual components (‘things’) in the image are close to the 1/3rd bisectors.
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Fay Godwin
Landscape photography often uses the rule of thirds – how?
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Fay Godwin
Landscape photography often uses the rule of thirds by having the horizon line on or near one of the two horizontal lines
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The Rule Of Even And Odd
Norman Parkinson
Dianne Arbus
An even number of ‘things’ in an image can sometimes create a feeling of tension or a slightly un-natural look.
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An odd number of subjects in an image often has a more natural, symmetrical or balanced feel than an even number.
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Henri Cartier Bresson
In much art 3 subjects or ‘things’ in an image (an odd number) can draw attention to the central subject.
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Triangles
Triangles have 3 sides and tend to form stable, solid looking compositions.
Arnold Newman
Can you spot any triangles?
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Victorian Family Portraits
Can you spot any triangles?
Why were triangular compositions often used for family portraits (think about what the triangle connotes – stability and solidity).
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Rule of space
Which composition is more dynamic?
Which composition is more ‘restful’, allowing the subject to ‘look dreamily into space’?
Nadar
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Swimmers diving into the water
(shot from beneath the water, looking upwards).
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Space is sometimes used to help suggest movement.
The swimmers appear to be moving into the empty space ahead of them
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Simplification
How does Rembrandt draw our attention into the face?
Rembrandt, Self Portrait.
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Simplification
ANSWER:
1. Lighting - the face has more light on it than other areas.
2. The brush-strokes are finer and more detailed in the facial area but become broader and less detailed for other areas.
3. Vignette – the painting becomes darker towards the edges.
4. Use of colour – dark ‘drab’ colours except for the face.
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Is this picture ‘simplified’ ? If not, why not … and so what might the photographer Joel Meyerowitz be saying about life in the modern city?
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Symmetry & Repetition
In this photograph the building seems to be ‘balanced’ by the white cloud. The line of symmetry runs from the bottom left to top right corner.
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Norman Parkinson
Where is the line of symmetry in this image?
24Chris Monaghan
Does this image exhibit any symmetry?
When something has no symmetry we say that it is asymmetrical
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David Seymour (Chim)
How does NOT being symmetrical help or add to the viewing experience and meaning of this image?
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Pattern
Jackson Pollock
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Andreas Gursky Paul Strand
Pattern can be used to suggest texture, or can produce an abstract visual experience.