Visual language is the system of signs, symbols, and formal elements that artists use to communicate meaning in their work. Just as spoken or written language uses words and grammar, visual art uses formal elements and principles of design to create messages, evoke emotions, and express ideas or issues.
The building blocks of visual language are the formal elements:
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Line | Marks that create direction, movement, contour, or texture |
| Shape | 2D areas defined by edges — geometric or organic |
| Form | 3D quality — actual (sculpture) or implied (shading) |
| Colour | Hue, value, saturation — creates mood, symbolism, contrast |
| Tone/Value | Light and dark — creates depth, drama, focus |
| Texture | Surface quality — actual (physical) or implied (visual) |
| Space | The area within, around, or between elements — positive/negative |
| Pattern | Repetition of elements |
| Scale/Proportion | Size relationships between elements |
KEY TAKEAWAY: Formal elements are the vocabulary of visual language. The principles of design are the grammar — they determine how elements are arranged to create meaning.
The principles of design describe how formal elements are organised:
Artists make deliberate choices about formal elements and principles to communicate specific ideas:
Colour symbolism:
- Warm colours (red, orange) → passion, danger, energy
- Cool colours (blue, green) → calm, sadness, nature
- Desaturated/grey tones → melancholy, ambiguity, memory
Line quality:
- Jagged, broken lines → tension, anxiety, instability
- Flowing, curved lines → harmony, movement, nature
- Rigid, geometric lines → order, control, modernity
Composition:
- Centralised subject → importance, isolation, power
- Rule of thirds → natural visual balance
- Empty space (negative space) → loneliness, contemplation
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA assessors expect you to link formal elements to meaning. Don’t just describe what you see — explain what effect it creates and what idea it communicates.
When artists address social or political issues, visual language choices are highly intentional:
Example: Kerry James Marshall uses large-scale paintings depicting Black figures with rich, dark skin tones to counter historical underrepresentation and assert dignity — his visual language (scale, colour, composition) directly serves his social issue (racial representation in Western art).
As a VCE student, you must develop a personal visual language — a distinctive way of communicating that is uniquely yours. This involves:
EXAM TIP: In the exam, describe visual language choices with precision: identify the element or principle, describe how it is used, then explain the effect. E.g., “The artist’s use of high contrast between black and white creates a sense of dramatic tension, reinforcing the theme of conflict.”
When analysing an artwork, use this structure:
Example analysis: “Frida Kahlo’s use of symbolic objects in Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird — the thorn necklace drawing blood, the dead hummingbird — creates a visual metaphor for personal pain, communicating the idea of suffering resulting from her relationship breakdown and physical trauma.”
APPLICATION: Practise writing visual language analyses using the Identify → Describe → Interpret → Connect framework for artworks you study.
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Formal elements | The basic visual building blocks (line, shape, colour, etc.) |
| Principles of design | Rules for organising elements (balance, contrast, etc.) |
| Visual metaphor | Using visual elements to represent abstract ideas |
| Symbolism | Objects/colours that carry deeper meaning |
| Composition | Arrangement of visual elements in an artwork |
| Picture plane | The flat surface of a 2D artwork |
| Visual hierarchy | The order in which the eye perceives elements |
STUDY HINT: Build a personal reference list of formal elements and what effects they typically create. Memorise this vocabulary and practise applying it to artworks you study and your own work.