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Visium: The Hidden Language of Images
Tal Lazar
15 episodes
1 month ago
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TV & Film
Arts,
Education,
Visual Arts
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All content for Visium: The Hidden Language of Images is the property of Tal Lazar and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Show more...
TV & Film
Arts,
Education,
Visual Arts
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Design Elements
Visium: The Hidden Language of Images
10 minutes 12 seconds
2 months ago
Design Elements
What makes an image feel powerful, even when it breaks all the “rules”? In this episode we start with Edgar Degas, the artist who scandalized 19th-century critics by framing scenes in ways that felt careless, even wrong. But those so-called mistakes were deliberate, inspired by photography, and they reshaped how we see. That idea becomes the thread for this conversation: as filmmakers, when do we stick to tradition, and when do we break it on purpose? How do we know the difference between a careless choice and a calculated one? We dig into four visual building blocks that shape how an audience feels without them even noticing: shape, space, brightness and darkness, and texture. You’ll hear how a triangle can tilt the balance of power in Citizen Kane, how contrast in The Godfather and There Will Be Blood uses the audience’s own eyes to do the storytelling, and why David Hockney’s flat poolside scene feels so emotionally distant compared to the hyper-real textures of Ingres. Along the way, you’ll start seeing the hidden architecture of images (and learn how to use it) so you can decide not just what’s in the frame, but exactly how it makes people feel.
Visium: The Hidden Language of Images