Photograph Analysis Exercise 1-4
Photograph Analysis Vocabulary The following is a list of vocabulary you will need to write an effective analysis. Some fall under the category of Principles of Design, while others are considered elements or components. Regardless of how we group them or call them, these terms help you dissect a photograph. As a student, you should be mindful of what your teacher in specific class calls which and follow directions. I don’t actually care how we categorize them. I list as many as I use myself so to help you read and analyze your photograph. I write these in ways to help you think them through. Note: This is not a complete list of vocabulary. General vocabulary: § Abstract: An image that emphasizes formal elements (line, shape, etc.) rather than specific,
recognizable objects or figures. § Representational: Images of recognizable objects or figures. § Foreground: The objects or figures that are the closest to the viewer. § Background: The objects or figures that are the furthest from the viewer. § Midground: The objects or figures that are in between the foreground and background.
§ Subject: The main object or figure in a photograph. § Content: The subject, topic or information captured in a photograph. § Context: All other factors that might influence or effect the photograph or the photographer.
Can be culturally, geographically, politically or financially (i.e. a commercial to sell a product).
§ Objective: The capturing of a subject in a non-objective way, showing no personal bias, not making any statement. Showing the subject as is. No posing. You generally find this in news photography.
§ Intention: What the artist wants the viewer (you) to see in the photograph or the reasons for the artist’s choices (could be formal or aesthetic).
§ Expressive: Showing emotion. § Theme: A consistent, dominant, and unifying idea in a body or collection of work.
subject
Representational Abstract
§ Geometric shape: Shapes found in geometry like circles, squares, triangles, and rectangles. § Landscape: Environment (can be natural or man-made like buildings).
§ Aesthetic: The way the image looks, the style, the experience that the artist presents (rage,
grief, suffering, joy, etc.)
Formal elements: The line, shape, form, texture, pattern, color, space, light, and composition in the photograph.
o Line: vertical, horizontal, curved or jagged. o Shape: Two-dimensional shapes (can be geometric or organic). o Form: Three-dimensional representation of objects. o Texture: The surface of any object or shape (does it look rough, smooth, soft…) o Pattern: The use of repetition to create interest. Repetition can also create
texture. o Color or value: Look for warm vs. cool, dark vs. light values, bright vs. dull, etc. o Space: Look for cluster of objects, crowds, busy area vs. emptiness, airy. Does
the foreground (floor/ground space) take up most of the photograph or is it mostly the background (sky)?
o Light: Which part of the photograph is highlighted? In the shadow? Is the light natural or artificial? Harsh or soft? Can you tell the time of day from the light? How does the light effect the meaning of the photograph?
o Composition: The arrangement of the formal elements that make up the image. § Angle: The vantage point from which the photograph was taken (ground
level, aerial, exaggerated? § Contrast: Strong visual differences such as dark vs. light, crowd vs.
empty, smooth vs. rough, etc. § Balance: The distribution of visual elements to create weight or stability:
Symmetrical vs. Asymmetrical.
§ Movement: The placement of objects/figure/space/color/values to guide/direct for the viewer.
§ Pattern: The use of repetition to create interest. Repetition can also create texture.