Preview

Distinctively Visual Themes

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
457 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Distinctively Visual Themes
Speech of Distinctively visual:
Hi everyone
Today, I would like to show you how distinctively visual elements in my chosen text such as: gesture, composition, emotion expression, color and lightning… can be used by the composer to affect an audience’s response to these themes-
Suffering
Poverty
Love
The distinctively visual text I have chosen is one in a series of photographs of Agent Orange victims after the Vietnam War. This photograph was taken by an anonymous photographer which shows an Agent Orange affected child being bath by his mother. The photographer had purposely taken this photograph to illustrate lives of people who have got the affection of Agent Orange.
The photographer has skillfully captured the emotional expression in the photo, and effectively used the color and lightning to suggest how much they must have suffered from Agent Orange. The photo is mainly in black and grey. These are colors of darkness and sadness to indicate their suffering present and future life. Lightning is also effectively used as light is focused on the mother and her child who draw the attention of the audiences. Most importantly, the photographer has captured the images of the frowning mother, the crying son which has leave strong impression to the audiences and make them aware of their suffer.
…show more content…
Through the composition in the photo, the poverty these people are living in has been successfully illustrated. In this photo, at the front of the house, where everything is exposed, the mother bathed her son in a basin and with only an old, big bucket to fill water. The house behind them is old, broken and rundown. Everything has shown a life of deprivation and misery. Those are completely what happen in their daily life and are not purposely arranged. This fact has help make the audiences understand and create the feelings of sympathy towards

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Harvey Parson War

    • 536 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Portraying the connotations of the color red is painless, blood, war, anger, etc., but I wanted to challenge myself for this second piece. I chose the color yellow because it is predominantly positive. It represents youth, joy, and sunshine, yet until recently I have always viewed it rather negatively. The right hue almost evokes a sense of nausea, and so I used this feeling as the concentration of the…

    • 536 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dead tree trunks rise from the muddy ground and clouds of smoke obscure the view of the background. The searchlights piercing through the murky clouds give off a sense of lostness, but may also signify that among the barren wasteland, there is still a sign of humanity and hope. This painting exceptionally illustrates how the war changed beautiful, innocent meadows and fields into grotesque and frightening wastelands.…

    • 738 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Heart breaking photos of children in torn clothes with sad faces touches our heart and it makes us feel and makes us want to help. Many nonprofit organizations such as Habits for humanity use this tactic as a way to convey the seriousness of homelessness and the struggle, and of course, to raise funds in their efforts for addressing it. These organizations believe they must show despair through photos and in order to do that they must represent poverty as something that can be easily seen and recognized: fallen down shacks, barefoot kids with stringy hair, and women and men staring in the camera with empty eyes. When poverty is looked at in only this light it is feeding into the troubles, as George says “these portrayed images limits our understanding of what poverty is and how we might address it.”…

    • 692 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    What important elements have helped to create distinctive and effective visual impacts in The Shoe-Horn Sonata and ONE other related text of your own choosing?…

    • 1002 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Universal Themes

    • 583 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Self­determination is a fierce inner force, but is often thwarted or delayed by outside forces…

    • 583 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    english

    • 320 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Through the use of various techniques and features, composers are able to create images that are distinctively visual and become significantly memorable to their audience. These images are creatively used by composers to communicate significant ideas and thematic concerns more profoundly in their texts. Peter Goldsworthy’s novel ‘Maestro’, and Robert Frost’s poem ‘Mending Walls’, are examples of how composers communicate their purposefully created images to address the significant ideas of their texts.…

    • 320 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “Flavio’s Home” the home life is beyond awful. The lives of everyone in the slums is just poor and miserable, they have no money and no clean supplies to live on. In this essay I will tell you about the living and health situations, water and food supply, and how the slums have changed. It is a shame because these people live like this day in and day out for their whole lives and it never changes. “I’ve never lost my fierce grudge against poverty. It is the most savage of all human afflictions, claiming victims who can’t mobilize their efforts against it, who often lack strength to digest what little food they scrounge up to survive. It keeps growing, multiplying, spreading like a cancer.” (Parks 1) Even in today’s world, there are so many people living in poverty. It has not changed at all, in fact it has moved all the country.…

    • 826 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    * Clear links are evident between the speeches with the way in which the composer evokes the feelings of the audience through their distinctive voices to convey their ideas.…

    • 1407 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Trash Andy Mulligan Essay

    • 989 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In the novel the author uses setting and characterisation to examine the idea/theme of poverty. On page Pg3 there is a brilliant quote from Raphael referring to Belhala, to support the theme. “Most people live in boxes stacked tall and high.” Using this quote we can infer that most residence of Belhala live in boxes, stacked up on top of each other. Therefore they mustn’t have enough funds or money to afford a suitable house to sojourn in. This is an excellent example of the theme of poverty. Using setting once again we can observe the idea of poverty in the text. Through another quote from Raphael on Pg4 the idea is portrayed celestially. “The mountains go right from the docks to the marshes, one whole world of steaming trash.” Using this quote we can identify that Belhala is not an established, well built or profitable city. Instead it is unfortunately, a city of steaming garbage. Accordingly, this must mean the inhabitants haven’t enough money to live in a well-equipped, well-built city. Instead they live their daily lives among trash. This again portrays the theme of poverty superbly in the text. Lastly using characterisation the idea of poverty can be further investigated in the text. Using yet another quote (Pg4), from Raphael the idea is portrayed sufficiently. “I am one of the rubbish boys, picking…

    • 989 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Desperate Despair

    • 377 Words
    • 2 Pages

    When reading this realistic article "What Is Poverty?" by Jo Goodwin Parker, who shares her disturbing experiences living in poverty throughout her entire life. This story will open people's eyes to realize to be grateful for the little things we have in life. As the author defines poverty, one can feel her intentions are to put a sense of guilt towards the less fortunate. In the beginning, Goodwin advises the reader to, "Listen without pity" by the end, the persuasive tone alters a greater influential impact (Goodwin 86). It is clear these forces of indifference are powerful emotions that can question one to reconsider what they would do in a case of being a prisoner to poverty.…

    • 377 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Photos of the genocide and casualties of war from Dafur show the world the darker side of humanity. The particular photos inside this essay embody the hard life and murder that the citizens must face. Powerful and alarming, these pictures tell the world of a story that evokes an emotional and psychological reaction in its viewers.…

    • 1217 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Portrait 8

    • 12950 Words
    • 57 Pages

    We can tell they are from a poor location since her clothes are not By looking at the photo washed, the child that is being carried This picture indicates that strategies we can immediately has not got shoes on and her face and priorities are a lot different in identify that the man looks dirty. This image creates an poorer countries.…

    • 12950 Words
    • 57 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    An image that speaks

    • 1587 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Some photos never leave one’s memory. The photo that I choose for this essay is one such photo. It is the Pulitzer prize-winning photograph taken in 1994 in Sudan by Kevin Carter during the Sudan famine depicting a child about to die of starvation with a large vulture type bird in the background waiting for child’s impending death. The question I want to discuss in this essay concerning the photo “the starving child and the vulture” photograph, is how does this photo illustrate some of the terms that Barbie Zelizer uses in her essay “ The voice of the Visual Memory” including: collective memory, subjunctive voice, third meaning and the about to die moment and the rhetorical terms to describe this photo?…

    • 1587 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Drug Abuse

    • 24247 Words
    • 97 Pages

    purpose of this thesis was to describe what the street child’s family look like, how individual…

    • 24247 Words
    • 97 Pages
    Powerful Essays