Composition and Structure of The Image: How Is The Image Organised To Create A Cohesive, Coherent Whole?
Composition and Structure of The Image: How Is The Image Organised To Create A Cohesive, Coherent Whole?
Composition and Structure of The Image: How Is The Image Organised To Create A Cohesive, Coherent Whole?
For each discussion question, ask students to expand on their responses by explaining reasons why, and encourage them
to use evidence from the image to justify their responses, using visual design metalanguage.
Here, the red hooded cloak draws our eye. The line of the trees leading towards the cottage with its open door, then leads
the eye along a reading path.
Usually, the English-speaking reader will read a page from left to right and from top to bottom. However, image authors can
design specific reading paths which can begin and end in different ways.
Identify the vectors in this image. Where are these vectors directing your gaze? Do these vectors direct your gaze towards
a particular viewing/reading path in the image?
Along a horizontal line we can be directed to view from left to right, or from right to left. For example, in the example below
from Scary Night by Lesley Gibbes and Stephen Michael King, our eye is first drawn to the large moon, in the top left hand
quadrant, and is then lead down to the first character on the left.
This character points the viewer to read to the right across the image. However, at the end of this horizontal vector, the
largest and final character on the right is facing back to the left. This points the viewer back to the left again, focusing our
attention on the smallest character in the middle. Each of the characters on the left, and the right of this character, are
directing us to this point.
The vector lines in the Piggy Book image below, marked in red, show how this image has a more complex reading path.
The reader's eye is first drawn to the most salient item, the large pink expanse of the father pig's head. The reading path
then follows the father pig's gaze down to the small pig's eyes. The father pig’s ears are also pointing us in this direction.
The reading path then follows the son's gaze back up to the father's eyes, emphasised by the small pig's ears also pointing
us back in this direction. The reading path then follows the line of the father's snout pointing across to the left, to draw the
viewer's attention to the window and to the wolf.
From PIGGY BOOK by Anthony Browne
© 1986 Anthony Browne
Reproduced by permission of Walker Books Australia Pty Ltd