Emphasis is an object
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Answer:
Most images need a focal point or points to provide visual emphasis. These are elements that attract the eye and act as a visual
climax, stressing a key point or points within the composition.
Without emphasis, your eye tends to wander and is never satiated.
Focal point devices to keep in mind are color, contrast, depth of field, isolation, light, placement, perspective, and size. One is often played off against another; for example, a limited depth of field may be used to isolate the primary subject. Secondary points of interest, known as accents, can direct the eye to parts of a composition that have less visual value than the primary focal point, but are still important for understanding the work. Yet sometimes an imagemaker will purposely create an ambiguous composition without a single focal point by deploying a multiplicity of points; this draws attention to the entire surface of the work instead of its individual elements.