Learn Visual Language and Unlock the Power Of Composition Theory!

I used to have this issue with tilted horizon lines. I’d see a photo – say, a beach photo, a nice sunset or something – and I’d notice the horizon was slightly bent. It would drive. me. nuts. But I never really understood why it annoyed me so much. That’s what I want to talk about in this video. Well, not bent horizons, but composition. Specifically, the power composition can have over us, why it has this power and how a deep knowledge of composition theory will give you a huge advantage over other photographers.

Composition in photography is oddly undervalued. It might not feel like it when you skim through the thousands of Rule of Thirds videos on YouTube, but today’s popular conception of composition is pretty threadbare. Especially when you compare it to the knowledge available to classically trained artists, like Caravaggio or Raphael.

This situation partly due to the Modern Art movement. A movement that tossed out the idea of learning composition theory, in favor of an artist’s innate intuition. Modernists were about stream-of-consciousness over planning, emotion over design. And because Modern Art was the dominant art philosophy when photography came into being, photography just never really adopted classical composition theory.

Visual Language and the Power of Composition

Instead, in an effort to explain the undeniable fact that some compositions just ‘feel’ right while others don’t, that some compositions are affecting but others aren’t. Well, instead we’ve been left with the ‘rule of thirds’, the ‘rule of odds’, and a bunch of others. But these rules aren’t new, they’re abstractions, and poor abstractions at that. They have their roots in classical composition theory, and like a cheap knockoff you might buy from Amazon, they’re not very good.

So, photographers get handed these simplified composition rules, they get taught that using them is a choice, and that they should follow their intuition. The problem is, this isn’t good advice because, when used well, composition can affect people. It can make them feel. So, composing in an arbitrary manner, is a wasted opportunity. It’s a wasted opportunity to connect with your audience, to communicate with them.

Much of the power of composition stems from its ability to manipulate our perception. Because we don’t actually see a scene, a person, a painting or a photo, we perceive it. Seeing and perceiving are far from the same thing. We use internal heuristics to make a continuous stream of educated guesses on what’s within our visual field. And we’re pretty good at it. It’s a process that’s been shaped over millions of years of evolution, further molded by society, and of course, our own experiences. That perception IS our world view. It’s how we ground ourselves.

And in that worldview…. a horizon line is normally straight.

A bent horizon means something out of the ordinary is happening: you’re falling, jumping, dancing, whatever. In cinema, it’s called a Dutch angle, and it’s used to indicate that something abnormal is happening. It’s meant to make the viewer feel unsettled, ill at ease, on edge. Bent horizon lines are also used a lot in sports photography where they help imply movement and action. Street photographers employ the technique all the time as it lends a certain energy to their work, one that echoes the energy of the angular city they live in.

A lot can happen when you tilt a horizon line. That’s why I’d get angry when I saw those photos. Because the composition would mess with my worldview, with my perception of the world. Composition really can be a powerful tool.

Harnessing this power comes from understanding that photography, like any art form, is a way to visually communicate. Composition is the vocabulary of this visual language, and the way you structure the elements in that composition is the message. It’s what you are saying to your audience. It’s explaining why the photo you created needed to exist. That’s why we shouldn’t think of composition as an arbitrary choice. It has to help support the message you are telling your audience. It has to be deliberate.

A photographer fluent in visual language will deliberately shape their composition so they capture the emotion or the mood of that moment. Not just the reality of it. They will attempt to compose their frame to make sure that the visual elements cohesively communicate that message. A photographer who isn’t fluent in visual language may not even notice a bent horizon. Why would they, they don’t understand how that element might be perceived.

In fact, this idea that every photo is a chance to communicate, is one of the key differences –  I think – between an amateur and a experienced photographer. The amateur takes a photo and then tries to make it pretty. Maybe they crop it to the Rule of Thirds, maybe they throw a LUT over it. But they are doing these things arbitrarily. An experienced photographer decides what they want their photo to say at the time they take it. And then they deliberately create a composition to support that message.

Learning visual language is just like learning any new language. You start with a limited vocabulary but, with practice you become more fluent. You progress from simple, literal descriptions like, “This is a sunset”, or “This is a person,” to more impactful, complex messaging. Learning visual language is how you become a better photographer and a better storyteller.

Are you interested in joining me on a workshop? Head over to:

https://jpstonesphotography.com/workshops/

Want to become a better visual storyteller? Do my free online course!

https://jpstonesphotography.com/storytelling-photographers-free-online-course/

2 Comments
  • Juliet
    Posted at 03:00h, 14 December Reply

    Hey JP

    Really enjoyed your video, you speak so eloquently.
    Just wondering what the online course is that you are doing that you mentioned you are completing?
    Thanks!

    • JP Stones
      Posted at 17:43h, 14 December Reply

      Hi, thanks for your lovely message. I wrote the entire course , but instead of filming it for online sales I used it as a talk for photography groups. I’m working on more YoTve videos about storytelling that will be out in a few weeks though.

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