
Cezanne, Still-Life with
Apples and Oranges, 1899
There are unlimited
possibilities for what one can do with a composition; the
combinations are countless. Composition is essentially the
arrangement of objects/forms within the border of the canvas or
paper. The aim of this tutorial is to illustrate that there is
one essential ingredient to superb composition.
There are quite a few
compositional theories about how to direct the eye movement, how
to tier figures, how to create either dynamic or calm feelings,
etc. Virtually all of these theories are valid but the sheer
weight of all the different rules can easily overwhelm an artist
with a pencil in hand and a pristine white page in front of him
or the spectator trying to grasp the quality of a composition.
Since I was a kid I studied
artists and one particular approach I had was to look for the
common denominator between artists. For example, Rembrandt, Vermeer,
Michelangelo, Picasso (in specific periods) use an egg shape for
their heads. Another example is how great artists have similarly
arranged compositions and I discovered the following:
An excellent composition
has interesting shapes in all four corners.
The operative word is
interesting. And I cannot stress that aspect enough.
Artists too easily fluff the corners with gray emptiness or
boring, generic shapes. The pro-active way is to accent and
look for the shapes and colors that excite you.

Ok, let's start. Here is
Vermeer's Girl with a Water Pitcher, 1665. I have drawn
an oval on the image. What concerns us here are the colors and
shapes outside of the oval, the areas of the four
corners. We have the motifs of a map and the carpet table
cover on the right. There are beautiful abstract shapes of the window, corner of
the wall, and light in the upper left. And in the bottom left
there is
nuanced shadowing of the corner walls.
