Have a look at what the great masters did
What is the best book published to date on covering general photo composition techniques that every photographer should read?
-Manny
I read plenty of composition books dealing with both photography and painting. I began to understand composition by studying, and I mean really studying, Edward Weston and Eugene Atget. It seems to me you can read about composition, but you really have to look at pictures to understand.
Have a look at what the great masters did, and still do, not only the photographers, but painters, sculptors, filmakers, designers, architects, theatre makers, anybody who's (publicly-) creating can teach you something (even what NOT to do...).
For instance I learned lightning a table-top scene by looking at the (B&W) cinema from the '30s till the '40s where everything was so sophisticated and well thought out, and visiting the opera where I saw the best contre-jour ever!
And for composing a table-top scene, I study the 17th and 18th century (still-life-) paintings showing an ingenieus clair-obscur (!), while visiting the musea which are an endless source for inspiration!
AND, not in the least for me, looking at the work by Josef Sudek, Eugène Atget and Paul Strand (20th century)!
In the beginning, I even copied their work as an exercise...
Learning is a never ending quest!
Sezane
Have a look at what the great masters did, and still do, not only the photographers, but painters, sculptors, filmakers, designers, architects, theatre makers, anybody who's (publicly-) creating can teach you something (even what NOT to do...).
For instance I learned lightning a table-top scene by looking at the (B&W) cinema from the '30s till the '40s where everything was so sophisticated and well thought out, and visiting the opera where I saw the best contre-jour ever!
And for composing a table-top scene, I study the 17th and 18th century (still-life-) paintings showing an ingenieus clair-obscur (!), while visiting the musea which are an endless source for inspiration!
AND, not in the least for me, looking at the work by Josef Sudek, Eugène Atget and Paul Strand (20th century)!
In the beginning, I even copied their work as an exercise...
Learning is a never ending quest!
I have no right to pontificate on this, but I tend to feel with @Philippe-Georges that composition is better absorbed than learned. IMHO, books at best teach you how composition is believed to work. The ‘rules’ that many authors derive retrospectively are not inviolable, are not enough in themselves, and could just lead to a boring same-ness.
This earlier thread might interest you? IIRC, it includes links to scientific studies trying to establish whether composition guides the eyes as expected.
I always read threads like this since there ends up being recommendations for books that I have not read.
I completely agree with @Michel Hardy-Vallée though. Any 2-dimensional artwork should be helpful in terms of thinking about composition.
I was hoping to pull Horenstein off of my bookshelf and see what he had to say but I no longer have my copy of "Balck and white Photography: A Basic Manual." For those of us who approached photography through school, I think it along with the Ansel Adams series are likely the first textbooks many of us were exposed to on the subject. The "rule of thirds" does rear its ugly head a lot in the scholastic realm. It's good to know why it's considered a "rule," and have a visual reference to support that. A good book on the subject better have quite a few images for examples.
I know there are many people on these threads who only show work to a limited group of family and friends. I will say that in honing one's eye for composition having people view your work is invaluable to gauging success or failure. Family and friends may also give one biased feedback.
Cézanne?
It seems that when he painted landscapes, they were pretty true to life.
Also, how does one "create a dynamic composition which guides the eye throughout the picture, and not simply in one glance."? And how was it determined that this is "the goal"?
As I mentioned before, looking at paintings is really useful. So is a little guidance. It's not a dichotomy; "either read a book or look at art". They're mutually reinforcing. Especially the books on composition that don't smash everything flat into a couple of "rules". I hope we can agree to ignore those. Besides, most of those aren't books, but websites built to generate income from the ubiquitous ads on them, aren't they?
Note that OP asked not "should I read books", but which books are recommended on the topic of composition. I'm very thankful for the few suggestions given, and have in fact already ordered one of the books mentioned. I think it's a great complement to my regular museum visits and look forward to reading it. I'm sure it'll make me look at art in a more conscious way.
Going to museums doesn’t help much if one hasn’t studied how to see.
That is key!Going to museums doesn’t help much if one hasn’t studied how to see.
or waterfallsThinking back, the only hard & fast rule I remember was from the photography instructor who stated, on day one, "No photographs of trains or old vehicles".
Thinking back, the only hard & fast rule I remember was from the photography instructor who stated, on day one, "No photographs of trains or old vehicles".
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