I had promised to add a little more about possible interpretations for the theme, “Follow the Path”.
In my initial description I asked you to conceive of images which pull or draw a viewer into a scene and then lead the eye toward some destination in the background. That visual journey is “the path”.
- Your path could be an empirical one, such as a sidewalk, trail, road, staircase, garden walkway, creek, or train tracks.
- Your path could be suggested by capturing movement, such as birds flocking, people moving together in a line, or a pack of dogs on the chase.
- Your path could be made of variations of color, such as the new spring leaves and flowers or autumn gold and red that many of us will be seeing during these next two months.
- Your path could be made of contrasts in light and shadow.
- Your path could be made of things in focus and out of focus.
- Your path could be set at a macro level
- Your path can be a combination of all of these things.
The second element in my initial description suggested for your image to entice the viewer to want to follow the path. So if your photograph is saying, “It is just over that hill”, the viewer should wish to make the climb. If the message is, “We’re going this way”, the viewer should desire to get in line. Or if your photograph implies, “It is right through this door”, the viewer will want to step into the room.
A historic image which illustrates the theme I have selected is the composition entitled “Mt. Williamson”, by Ansel Adams. In the foreground your eye is immediately drawn to enormous round rocks; not just a few of them, but a sea of them. Then your eye travels to the background toward what Adams described as “a glorious storm going on in the mountains”. No matter how many times I look at this photograph, each and every time I find myself reaching for my hiking boots, wishing I had the chance to struggle through that ocean of rocks and get to that mountain, up-close, before the sun sets, and the storm ends.
I hope this added description helps inspire ideas for you, and I look forward to visually traveling on your paths.
Russ