This image by Jason Chan makes very good use of space using divine proportions. The viewer is drawn into the key focal point of the rider in the bottom left, but also to the eel head fighting the angel in the centre of the image. He has also made very good use of the rule of thirds by making sure the action is spread evenly into every third.
Here is another image by Jason Chan that makes good use of changes in the ambient lighting. The leading line across the centre of the images separates the warm orange of the top to the cool blues towards the bottom. It also leads your eye down from the figure on top, toward the girl in the bed, and finally in the direction of the girl beside the bed. I think this the perfect order, as you can see the cause, the result, and the solution.
This in an image by Marco Bucci entitled 'Venice'. When I looked at this image, I was in too minds of the composition, but I believe it is a mix of and L Shape composition and Divine Proportions. The buildings break the image perfectly up into 3 evenly spaced L's which means the artist has thought well about the rule of thirds. There is also a sense of descending through the image, meaning that a Route 3 Rectangle was probably used to get the proportions of the distant canal.



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