Many artists struggle with composition because they think of it as decoration—something added after a subject is already chosen. When a painting feels confusing, the usual response is to rearrange objects or apply compositional rules in hopes of fixing it.
But composition is not something you add later. It is the result of decisions made from the very beginning. What you include, what you leave out, and what you give attention to are all compositional choices. When those choices are unclear, the painting feels unsettled no matter how much work is done on the surface.
In this article, you’ll see composition as a form of decision-making rather than decoration. A simple exercise will reveal to you how clarity begins to form when decisions are made consciously.







