How to create lingering impressions
I saw this painting at a museum, and it stayed with me. That’s the mark of intriguing design—it lingers in your mind long after you’ve seen it. Imagine if business content could do the same. So, what can business content creators learn from this artwork? Emotion is an important variable for memory. In this case, hanging clothes can evoke feelings of exposure, openness, and even vulnerability. And displaying legs and hands (in an almost uncanny valley type of way) intensifies the emotion. In addition, the partial reveal—legs without faces or torsos—activates the brain’s predictive systems, prompting us to imagine what’s unseen. This engages attention and creates a sense of mystery that holds the viewer’s focus and makes the emotion more intense yet.
Contrast also helps with emotion and memory. In this case, the artist contrasts the freely hanging clothes and barbed wire perhaps alluding the the contrast between freedom and restriction. Barbed wire is typically used to mark boundaries, often with consequences for crossing them. Its presence here may suggest the cost of stepping beyond one’s limits or the tension between safety and exploration.
There is also the idea that most things around us carry traces of human presence, reminding us of the lives behind ordinary scenes.
So what’s the takeaway? When using imagery in communication, ask: How much emotion does it carry? Is the emotion layered or one-dimensional? And is it the right intensity for your message? Too much emotion can overwhelm – in this painting, they mitigate a potential “creepy” feeling by using warm, harmonious colors. In business content, a strong emotional image would also need to be associated with a clear context and a clear message to avoid misinterpretation or eerie interpretations.