PetaPixel
10 Myths About the Rule of Thirds
My name is Tavis Leaf Glover, and I’m an artist just like you, trying to create art that I can be proud of and share with the world. Though, something really hindered me in the beginning… the Rule of Thirds.
I want to shed some light on the Rule of Thirds Myths we’ve all been forcefully spoon fed during our creative infancy, which continues to linger as our compositions mature.
Perhaps we can change the future of art together if we help other artists abandon the rule of thirds and introduce them to the invaluable design techniques demonstrated throughout this article. I need your help because I can’t do it alone!
Like many other artists, I was brainwashed into thinking that the rule of thirds is an acceptable method of composing an image. I guess that depends on the standard of art you’d like to produce. Art at the Master Level, like Da Vinci, Bouguereau, Degas, Rubens, or art like a Sunday painter whose goal is to hang their painting in the local antique store… not the prestigious gallery or museum.
Paintings by Da Vinci, Bouguereau, Degas, Rubens
It’s my experience that people don’t like rules, and they certainly don’t like to follow them. They are always saying the same cliché phrase “well, rule’s were meant to be broken” or “I think it’s good to learn the rules, but then know when to break them.”
The word “rule” has a meaning that can be looked upon as negative. What I’m striving to demonstrate isn’t a rule that needs to be broken. It’s a canon of knowledge that you can choose to incorporate into your art if you wish. Your choice, simple as that.
MYTH #1: “It makes it visually pleasing”
To debunk this, we have to know what makes an image visually pleasing, and I assure you, it’s not plotting your subject on a rule of thirds crosshair. To be visually pleasing is to apply your composition techniques in a way which is clearly read by the viewer… without getting caught up on distracting elements or creating confusion by lack of hierarchy. How do we do that?Well, we need to understand how the mind perceives visual stimuli. For this we use Gestalt psychology techniques like Figure-Ground Relationship (FGR) to clearly separate the subject from the background.
Photograph by Henri Cartier-Bresson showing excellent FGR.
Painting by Edgar Degas showing an Arabesque.
Photograph by David Bellemere.
MYTH #2: “Pros use it”
The next myth we have is “pros use it.” Annie Leibovitz is definitely a pro, and one of the most inspirational photographers of today. So let’s grab one of her photos and simply line it up to the rule of thirds grid, then we’ll see if she used it or not.
Photograph by Annie Leibovitz.
Showing the Rule of Thirds Grid lines up to the Mantel.
This is a Root 4 Rectangle with its Basic Armature (two diagonals, four reciprocals, horizontals and verticals).
A Root 4 rectangle can be divided into four smaller Root 4 rectangles.
This is a 1.5 rectangle with it’s Basic Armature (same size as many camera sensors) and 3 can fit inside a Root 4 rectangle.
This is the complete grid system.
“Laocoon & His Sons” is a Greek sculpture that was constructed by using Dynamic Symmetry.
MYTH #3: “It moves the eye around the image.”
This couldn’t be further from the truth. Plotting your subject on a point without consideration for the whole will not help create movement within your composition.
Photograph by Tavis Leaf Glover
Photograph by Tavis Leaf Glover
Painting by Vincent van Gogh showing an Arabesque.
It’s not a solid line as you might think when you hear the term “leading lines.” It’s broken, hidden, and a magic trick which we can use to allow the mind to easily close the gaps.
Painting by Caravaggio shows how he hides his lines by understanding the Law of Continuity.
Photograph by Annie Leibovitz showing Coincidences.
Paintings by Da Vinci and Bouguereau showing Coincidences.
MYTH #4: “It gets the subject out of the center.”
First off, who decreed that the center of a frame is so bad? Why are we lead to believe this?
Photograph by Tavis Leaf Glover
Photograph by Tavis Leaf Glover
Photograph by Tavis Leaf Glover
Painting by Bouguereau showing proper balance from top to bottom.
Painting by Degas showing proper balance from left to right.
Photograph by Tavis Leaf Glover showing how Balance can be properly achieved from top to bottom and left to right.
Photograph by Tavis Leaf Glover before learning design and Gestalt psychology techniques.
MYTH #5: “Basis for a well balanced and interesting shot”
We already covered the Law of Symmetry, which covers the proper balance of an image, but what we didn’t mention how the rule of thirds gives birth to unwanted negative space. If we are generically placing our subject into one of the crosshairs without consideration of the whole, then we won’t have a counterpart on the other side of the composition and we’ll have negative space that takes attention away from our subject.
Photograph showing how the rule of thirds creates unwanted negative space.
Negative space can be properly used to create a feeling of isolation or loneliness, but to use it without sophistication is a rookie move.
Photograph by Gregory Crewdson using Negative Space to enhance his story.
MYTH #6: “It’s a great starting point for beginners”
In my own experience, the rule of thirds only lead me down a dead end road. I thought of it as revolutionary at first and I was boasting its powers to photographers who were just starting out.Later I found myself at a plateau and not able to understand how to properly compose an image because the rule of thirds was guiding me.
Dynamic Symmetry Grids are just as easy to use as R.O.T.
Painting by Bouguereau showing how he creates rhythm in the model’s pose based off of his grid system.
MYTH #7: “Artists from the Renaissance, or Greek artists, created the rule of thirds”
The rule of thirds was first documented in a book by Smith (around 1797), and if you take a look at his painting, you’ll see that he wasn’t a master at all.Da Vinci would be rolling in his grave if he heard anyone say he was using the this. The amount of schooling, studying, and practice he put into his compositions, and someone is going to water it down to something as simple as the rule of thirds? No way!
Da Vinci, along with other master artists, Greek included, used dynamic symmetry, the golden section, and other design techniques like arabesques, gamut, coincidences, radiating lines, figure-ground relationship, ellipses and enclosures.
Painting by Bouguereau showing different design techniques.
MYTH #8: “The human eye naturally gravitates to the intersection points”
Photograph of a generically placed tree and horizon line.
When we make our subject the Greatest Area of Contrast (GAC), won’t we look there first…no matter what position they are in?
Photograph by Tavis Leaf Glover showing the Greatest Area of Contrast and a Counterpart.
Creating a hierarchy of contrast and keeping the edges free of distractions will help you control the way your viewer’s eyes move around the composition.
Painting by Whistler showing no Edge Flicker when Adjusted.
MYTH #9: “Cropping to the rule of thirds after shooting a photo is a great way to save an image”
Cropping a poorly composed, badly lit image will not save anything. That’s starting at the end and working backwards.
Try not to crop. Get it right in-camera to save precious pixels.
MYTH #10: “The power points, or golden points, create tension”
Placing your subject on a third is not going to create tension as we’ve learned so far.
Photograph by Tavis Leaf Glover showing how cropping doesn’t create tension.
Painting by Michelangelo
Photography by Tavis Leaf Glover
Photograph by Gregory Crewdson using negative space to create tension.
Conclusion
So many tricks and techniques can be applied to create a remarkable composition, which communicates clearly to your viewer. Abandon the rule of thirds. Leave it behind and adopt the dynamic symmetry grid which is just as simple to use, but can leave many more options open for you as your art progresses.
Painting by Toulouse Lautrec.
About the author: Tavis Leaf Glover is a fine art photographer and author based in Honolulu, Hawaii. You can find more of his work on his website and on Flickr. Glover is also an educator about applying Gestalt psychology principles to photography and art.
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