<:> Traditional principles



For images, aesthetic qualities appear to depend to some extent on `seeability', i.e., how easy it is to interpret the image.

Critical objects fully visible, not obscured by clutter, in the centre, informative lighting textures, clustering of salient entities etc.

But breaking such basic `rules' then becomes the means of achieving a different sort of aesthetic property, e.g., Bush pictured disapearing off the edge of the picture in a recent Time magazine cover.