Landscape Painting - Composition 1
It 
is very important that you find a subject to paint and you should direct
 all attention of the viewer towards your subject. The subject could be a
 house or a particular tree, or what ever you find interesting and want to show to your 
audience. You might be painting from photos or plein air, in both cases 
you should have something that attracted you to paint that particular 
scene and so you want it to be the subject of your painting.
Usually
 the subject is not placed at the centre of the painting  but somewhere 
in the lower quadrant on the right hand side of the painting (Fig 1). 
The human eye tends to travel more from left to right and you want to 
leed the viewer's eye into the picture and towards that subject.
As shown above, the canvas was divided into four quadrants and the 
subject was placed in the lower right hand side quadrant. However 
although this model is used quite often, this is not a rule. There are 
other ways of constructing a good composition. The most important is not
 to place the subject at the centre of your painting. The subject can 
also be anything or it could simply be an area of very bright light as 
in the image below.
To keep the viewer's eye in the 
picture and leading it to the subject it is important to place secondary
 objects pointing towards the subject. As in the painting above the path
 is leading towards that light and into the unknown. You can have 
branches, trees, a winding road etc to do this job. Never place objects 
facing out of the picture as this will distract the viewer's eye and 
will leed it out of the picture.
Aother
 issue to be considered is the viewpoint or whether you are looking at 
your subject at level or like you are looking at it from over the top of
 a hill (facing down). When looking from above you will see more objects
 into distance than if you are looking at level. So high viewpoint 
paintings will usually include less sky and more land, however it is 
challenging to demonstrate the effect of distance. If looking at level, 
then usually you will have more sky and objects at the back are partly 
or almost completely covered by those at the front.
 



 
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