Originally Posted by
Downrigger
Interesting thread.
First - I find that for me the two photographer image does illustrate two competing subjects, and succeeds nonetheless as an image. Both photographers prominent with similar mass, each different in interesting ways, resulting in a ping-pong/back-and-forth experience when viewing. The second one above better illustrates this, and it works for me as a successful, symmetric two subject image.
Second - I think Mike's comment interests me because I am not clear on the distinction between primary and secondary "subject" as strictly compositional elements (light, mass), versus elements characterized by the interest they command and the content they express.
For instance, imagine a photo of a face with a gorgeous flowering hedge as close-in background. If shot with the face showing a flat, disinterested expression, dull skin tones, no eye contact, the primary subject would be the blossoming hedge, with the face secondary. However, if in a second shot, the same face is animated, striking, attractive, sparkling and engaged, this image, with the same compositional elements has either switched primary and secondary or perhaps now has two primary subjects that compete for the eye.
The issue can be made more complex: if we make the face an attractive male or female and assay the "primariness" of the face as a compositional object we might obtain different results according to the sex of the viewer.
All this suggests to me, that definition of subject in terms of its strictly compositional content and impact is incomplete without also considering its subjective intellectual or psychological content and impact, and the latter may vary according to the viewer. To me this adds a complexity and relativity to apprehending composition that makes the common rules for it seem inadequate.'
You can tell I have no formal training in art - I bet this is all a well developed portion of one art curriculum or another.