Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
Tejal - I have very mixed feelings about the "rules of composition"as they are sometimes of use and at other times more of a hindrance. When I started learning photography, many of my images were "rule based", but after a while I gave up and started composing images that worked for me.
I remember some years ago picking up a book by Yousef Karsh, who is often considered to be the best portrait photographer of all time. I went through the images and found that he broke the rules in many, if not most of the images. In fact, if I were to post one of his shots here as my own, I feel that I would get a lot of push back for breaking the rules of composition.
One of my favourite photographic quotes comes from Ansel Adams, the great American landscape photographer; "There are no rules for good photographs, there are only good photographs." Look for balance and things that lead your viewer's eyes into the photography rather than specific rules to follow.
Your images are quite strong and well composed; the symmetry is a positive, not a negative. You are using the buildings as a frame, and the person is really an asymmetrical subject inside a symmetrical frame.