Elements of A Photograph
Elements of A Photograph
Elements of A Photograph
A) Light Light is the defining element of photography. Light literally brings the
photograph to life, and the type and quality of light have the strongest
effect on the resulting image. Often, photographers are inspired to create a
photograph because the light is so lovely, casting on the subject a quality
uniquely rendered by film.
Describe the type and quality of the light.
Type/source: Is the light natural (e.g., from the sun) or artificial (e.g.,
from a lamp, flash, studio strobe)? How does the type/source of
lighting affect the look of the image?
Quality/direction: Is the lighting coming from above, below, the
side? At what angle? Are there any shadows? Does the direction of
the light create an effect of dimension?
Quality/characteristics: Is the light soft or hard? Are the shadows
thin or thick? Do light and shadow make a pattern?
Light and shadow, the light and dark tones in the image, often provide
the most compelling patterns in a photograph.
Look closely at the light and dark tones in the image.
Find the shadows.
Describe the pattern that light and shadow make.
What kind of effect and mood do the light and shadow create?
B) Focus The word focus means center of attention. This uniquely photographic
attribute is created by both the focus and the aperture controls on the
camera.
The focus control centers on a part of the image, and when in focus
the area is clear, sharp, and detailed, with distinctions between forms.
When out of focus, the area is cloudy, indistinct, and vague, with blurriness
between forms.
The aperture control creates depth of field, the area that is in focus.
Aperture measures the distance from the end of the focus area to the focal
center (imagine the perimeter of a circle and its center). A shallow depth of
field is in focus only to a small degree around the focal center.
Figure 8
Figure 9
Point/ the picture and what the photographer’s attitude is toward the subject.
How the photographer perceives the subject influences how the
P) Subject What is the subject of the picture? A trickier question than it seems,
the subject of Muniz’s photograph, for example, can be creativity or Hans
Namuth or chocolate; it can be an abstract idea, a representation, or
specific content. (See Figure 7.)
All the visual elements are drawing the viewer’s attention to the
concrete subject (what is literally portrayed) and the abstract subject (the
main idea that the photographer is trying to communicate). Sometimes the
subject of art is an idea; in conceptual art, the idea often is the point of the
artwork. In narrative art, the subject portrays a story or part of a story with
the rest implied. In figurative art, the subject is the person, place, or thing
that is represented. The genre of the artwork is a good clue to the abstract
idea that the artist is addressing.
Concrete subject: What is the photograph of? This is what you see in the
image.
R) Foreground The foreground is the area in front of the subject. It also contains
valuable information that reflects the subject, and it can affect the
mood of the image and the access the viewer has to the subject.
Space in the foreground can create a feeling of distance from the
subject. Shading in the foreground can create dimension. Activity or
cropped forms can add dynamism to the composition, even a sense
of mystery. Sometimes there is nothing in the foreground, giving you
direct access to the subject.
Describe what you see in front of the subject.
What effect does the foreground have on how you see the
subject?
Action: What are the people doing? What is the purpose of the
action?
Expression: Describe their expression. Can you guess what they are
feeling?
Clothing: Describe what they are wearing. What can you learn about
them through their clothing? Can you guess where they work or what
they like to do? What age are they? Where are they from? What time
period are they from?
Pose: Describe how they are standing or sitting. Can you guess what their
attitudes are?
Character: From all the concrete details you can observe in the
photograph, can you guess what characteristics the people have? Are they
proud and principled? Lost and tired? Happy and motivated?
Image and text: If you are viewing a combination of image and text that
tell a story, consider how the two media resonate and work with each
other. What does each medium communicate? How does each contribute
to story and meaning? How does the text direct your interpretation of the
image and vice versa?
Setting: What place and time period are shown in the photograph?
Describe the details that you see in the setting.
Character: Describe the people in the photograph. What are they like?
Describe some of the characteristics that they seem to have. What are
they doing? What do you think they want? Can you imagine why? What
challenges do they face?
Situation/plot: Describe the situation that the characters are in. What is
happening in the picture? What do you think happened before the picture
was taken? What do you think will happen next?
Feeling and even the expressions of the people in the picture. Texture refers to the
photographic material (e.g., smooth glossy paper, rough matte paper, or
a Polaroid transfer on handmade paper). Images can also have a tactile
quality reflecting how a viewer may think an object would feel if touched
(e.g., the soft furriness of a dog’s ears). Colors inspire an emotional
reaction: Some colors in the blue family seem cool and in the red family,
hot. Mood is connoted by visual elements but depends on each person’s
subjective response.
How does this picture make you feel?
What elements (lighting, colors, shapes, texture, the subject) make
you feel that way?
W) Style Everyone has got style! Style is attitude; style is taste. Just as you have
a taste for certain types of clothes, photographers have likes and dislikes
for certain techniques, compositional elements, and working methods.
Consider the vantage point of the photograph. How would you
describe the attitude the photographer has toward the subject?
Look at a series of images by the same photographer. Do you
notice similar techniques, common elements in the composition, a
favored tilt to the camera?
Can you determine the method and aesthetic of the photographer?
Is the style bold and confrontational, or subtle and contemplative?
Describe the photographer’s style.
Y) Artist’s Without a direct quote from the artist, you can only guess about the
artist’s intention. Your observations on intention are based on what you can
Intention/ see in the image and information provided about the techniques used. The
Purpose style, content, and use of the image indicate its purpose (e.g., magazine
illustration, fine art still life).
Consider the photographer’s purpose in creating the image. Was
the photograph designed for use in a magazine, advertisement, or
fine art exhibition?
Can you find any information on what the artist was trying to
communicate?
Check the caption or wall text in an exhibition, publications,
interviews, and the Internet for more information.