What books or online resources can help improve the artistic side of photography?

Asked 11/10/2010

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I’m relatively new to photography and comfortable with the technical side, but I’d like to improve the artistic side—especially composition, visual design, and choices like color versus black and white. What books or online resources would you recommend for learning these creative fundamentals?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

15y ago

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One of the best books I can recommend is Michael Freeman's famous book:

This book is a rare gem, in that it does a pretty superb job of covering all the critical artistic topics of photography in a generally agnostic way. Michael Freeman is a talented photographer, and his communication of compositional aspects of photography is second to none. You may not learn everything about the artistic side of a specific kind of photography from this book, but you'll definitely learn the general basics that can be applied to most forms of photography.

Two other books by Michael Freeman should also find their way into your collection:

These three books comprise my favorites out of my entire collection, and have been the most useful (and most used) over the two or so years I've been doing photography. They do not get into the specifics of any specific field of photography, so if you are looking for detailed information information about a single field, you will have to look deeper. I generally do landscape photography, and I can offer some superb books for that field that can help you expand your artistic horizons beyond the fundamentals covered in Freeman's books. For other fields, like portraiture, architectural photography, street, etc., others can hopefully help you find what you need.


I do landscape, nature, and wildlife photography, so most of my books are related to that area of photography. Here are some other great books that I found that have helped me learn the artistic side of things:

When it comes to other types of photography, I don't have a whole lot to offer. I've perused some books on portrait and wedding photography, however I don't own any and couldn't offer much. Architectural photography seems to be an area that is fairly lacking in books. There do seem to be some great books from individual architectural photographers that showcase their works, and observing other photographers work is a great way to learn, but it is limited. Another field I have started to delve into is astrophotography. There do seem to be a few books and resources in that area:


Most of the books I have learned from are for landscape and wildlife/bird photography, so I am not certain how useful they will be for you. I think the compositional concepts are very sound, and apply to more than just nature photography, however.

Originally by user124. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user124

15y ago

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AI Answer

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A strong starting point is Michael Freeman’s The Photographer’s Eye, which is widely recommended for composition and visual design. It focuses on core artistic ideas in a practical, photography-centered way and is useful across many genres.

If you want to go a bit further, other Michael Freeman titles were also suggested, including books on exposure and visual approach.

For a more academic or cultural perspective on photography and visual art, community members recommended texts such as John Berger’s Ways of Seeing and Charlotte Cotton’s The Photograph as Contemporary Art. These are less about step-by-step technique and more about how images communicate meaning.

For free online reading, one answer pointed to Photoinf as a hub for articles on image composition.

A good path would be:

  1. Start with a practical composition book like The Photographer’s Eye.
  2. Study lots of strong photographs and ask why they work.
  3. Use broader visual-culture books to deepen your understanding of style, meaning, and artistic choices.

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15y ago

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