Get the Maximum with Minimalism

There are many ways to approach photography. When something catches a beginner’s eye, they just point, and click. (What innocent bliss!) With experience, photographers start thinking about subject placement and the Golden Ratio. But have you ever thought about taking composition to the extreme, for example by shrinking the main subject until it’s almost invisible, or by practically eliminating the background? That’s minimalism. What do you get after that? Well, if you want to take a break from the sea of Christmas ornaments around you, read on.

Minimalism is a style where you eliminate all parts of a photograph that are not criticially important.

A very common example here is capturing an isolated tree in a landscape. This is such a popular theme that some photo banks have started explicitly asking photographers not to send photos like this.

An isolated tree. I had to use the long end of the lens, to eliminate the distracting surroundings.  Canon 5D Mark II, EF Canon 70–200 mm F2.8 IS II, 1/160 s, F6.3, ISO 200, focus 200 mm.
An isolated tree. I had to use the long end of the lens, to eliminate the distracting surroundings. Canon 5D Mark II, EF Canon 70–200 mm F2.8 IS II, 1/160 s, F6.3, ISO 200, focus 200 mm.

The key for these minimalist pictures is to properly frame and isolate the subject. I have no idea anymore how the surroundings looked in the case of the previous picture, but it’s quite possible that there was a forest on one side, and a highway or electric poles on the other. All of that would divert my audience’s attention. By leaving out elements like these, you can get a much stronger effect on your audience.

Winter, meanwhile, gives you unique opportunities here. Snow can drastically simplify a scene. If you wait for a snowy landscape and a white sky, you can experiment with high contrast for everything else:

In a snowy winter landscape, you can take pictures that feel like computer graphics. Canon 5D Mark III, EF Canon 70–200 mm F2.8 IS II, 1/250 s, F8.0, ISO 100, focus 200 mm.
In a snowy winter landscape, you can take pictures that feel like computer graphics. Canon 5D Mark III, EF Canon 70–200 mm F2.8 IS II, 1/250 s, F8.0, ISO 100, focus 200 mm.

Our next picture looks very different, but it’s just as minimalist. The sharp sunlight against the lens produces very strong contrast, making the remaining objects practically black. But the scene itself would look empty if not for the two people amid the reflection on the ocean surface.

I began preparing this photo as soon as I saw the two beachwalkers. The key was to patiently wait for them to reach the spot directly under the sun. Canon 40D, Canon EF-S 10–22 mm F3.5–4.5 USM, 1/1600 s, F8.0, ISO 100, focus 17 mm.
I began preparing this photo as soon as I saw the two beachwalkers. The key was to patiently wait for them to reach the spot directly under the sun. Canon 40D, Canon EF-S 10–22 mm F3.5–4.5 USM, 1/1600 s, F8.0, ISO 100, focus 17 mm.

The following photo with an isolated bird is in a similar style to the isolated tree. In these pictures, every detail counts. The picture would look different with two, one, or no birds flying in the background. In the end I left two birds, but I’m still not sure if that was the best variant.

A composition that is hard to describe. But it has neither the golden ratio, nor diagonals, nor anything similar. Canon 350D, EF-S Canon 18–55 mm F3.5–5.6, 1/160 s, F16, ISO 100, focus 55 mm.
A composition that is hard to describe. But it has neither the golden ratio, nor diagonals, nor anything similar. Canon 350D, EF-S Canon 18–55 mm F3.5–5.6, 1/160 s, F16, ISO 100, focus 55 mm.

But I don’t always have to have the sky as my background. I can also get pictures with minimally distracting surroundings using the walls of buildings, for example when a plant is creeping along a facade that has no visual impact beyond a little noise:

   Detail of a creeping plant on an anonymous wall. Canon 5D Mark II, EF Canon 70–200 mm F2.8 IS II, 1/60 s, F4.5, ISO 160, focus 70 mm.

Detail of a creeping plant on an anonymous wall. Canon 5D Mark II, EF Canon 70–200 mm F2.8 IS II, 1/60 s, F4.5, ISO 160, focus 70 mm.

There are many other pictures that could be classified as minimalist, such as e.g. the blurred abstract photos that we wrote about in the runup to last Christmas.

An abstract view of an urban intersection. Canon 5D Mark III, EF Canon 70–200 mm F2.8 IS II, 1/60 s, 1/20 s, F2.8, ISO 800, focus 190 mm
An abstract view of an urban intersection. Canon 5D Mark III, EF Canon 70–200 mm F2.8 IS II, 1/60 s, 1/20 s, F2.8, ISO 800, focus 190 mm

So if you want to try something new, on your next photographic adventure, try looking carefully around you and picking out the simplest composition. This is an approach that can help you train your attention and your photographic eye. And if you have taken some minimalist pictures recently, we’ll be delighted if you leave an example of them in the comments. There can never be too much inspiration!