Leo+DadMade for Leo
What Is Landscape?
Rung 4 of 4 · Mastery

Choosing a Place That's Actually Yours

Where it all pays off: you stop making landscapes of nice views and start making landscapes of places that mean something — beginning with finding yours.

Subjective & cultural frame Builds on: where it gets tricky

Build Pick a place that matters and a feeling you've had there — the toy spins it into a landscape brief.
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Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

A landscape was never really about the scenery. Underneath, it's about feeling and belonging — the pull of a place, the fact that this spot, out of everywhere on earth, is one you carry around inside you. This is the rung where you stop choosing views because they're pretty and start choosing them because they're yours. That's exactly what the rest of this unit, all the way to your own composition, is going to ask of you.

Belonging Is the Real Subject

Land becomes landscape because a person cared enough to frame it. So the most powerful landscapes aren't the grandest views — they're the ones the artist belonged to. For Aboriginal artists, Country is exactly this: not scenery you look at, but a place you're part of, that holds story, family, law and time. You don't have to share that relationship to learn from it: it tells you that the strongest landscapes come from a real bond between a person and a place. Your version might be smaller and that's fine. The backyard you grew up in. The beach track. Nan's garden. A laneway in town that's somehow yours. Belonging, not beauty, is the engine.

The move: don't hunt for an impressive place to draw. Ask the quieter question — which place, if it were bulldozed tomorrow, would actually hurt? That ache is the subject. Frame that.

Feeling Tells You How to Frame It

Once you've got a place that matters, the feeling you have there decides every choice from rung two — viewpoint, cropping, what to leave in. Love it and feel safe there? Get in close, warm light, generous frame. Find it lonely or a bit haunted? Pull back, leave it empty, let the sky press down. The feeling isn't decoration you add at the end; it's the instruction that drives all the framing. That's the whole climb coming together: a place you belong to (rung 4), read for what to keep and cut (rung 2), made specific and true rather than generic (rung 3), all resting on the simple fact that a landscape is a choice (rung 1).

Why This Is the Real Finish Line

Knowing land from landscape was the "aha". Learning to read what's left out made you sharp. Dodging the cliché made you honest. But choosing a site that genuinely matters to you, and framing it so a stranger can feel why — that's mastery, and it's the doorway straight into Composing the landscape and Landscape across cultures and time, where you'll build the real thing.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

If you had to pick one place that's truly yours to make a landscape of, what is it — and what's the feeling?

Whose Country are we standing on right now, and how might they have framed this same place?

Which of the four rungs should we come back and re-drag in a fortnight?