This series began with a simple observation.
Much work on visual semiosis proceeds differently from the way Systemic Functional Linguistics approaches language.
When analysing language, Halliday begins from systems rather than structures, from meaning rather than form, and from the view from above rather than the view from below.
When analysing images, however, researchers often begin with visible features and ask what they mean.
The image becomes a collection of observable forms awaiting interpretation.
Colour is assigned meanings.
Compositions are assigned meanings.
Framing relations are assigned meanings.
The distinction between content and expression frequently becomes blurred.
The result is not necessarily wrong.
But it is no longer recognisably Hallidayan.
This series has been an attempt to recover the theoretical resources needed for a genuinely Hallidayan approach to visual semiosis.
Returning to Halliday's Architecture
The central claim of the series has been deceptively simple.
Visual semiosis should be approached through the same global dimensions that organise language:
stratification,
instantiation,
metafunction.
These dimensions are not peculiar to language.
They are dimensions of semiotic organisation.
What distinguishes language is not the existence of these dimensions but the particular way in which language instantiates them.
Most importantly, language possesses a stratified content plane consisting of semantics and lexicogrammar.
Visual semiosis does not appear to.
This difference has profound consequences.
It means that visual semiosis cannot simply be treated as a language without words.
Nor should it be analysed by searching for visual equivalents of clauses, phrases, or grammatical structures.
Images are not languages.
The task is therefore not to extend linguistic categories into visual space.
The task is to understand visual semiosis on its own terms.
Content and Expression
One of the most persistent themes of the series has been the distinction between content and expression.
All semiosis requires both.
Yet visual analysis often oscillates between them without clearly distinguishing the two.
The problem becomes especially visible in discussions of colour.
Colour belongs to expression.
Meaning belongs to content.
The significance of colour lies not in what colour means but in how colour participates in the realisation of meaning.
The same principle applies more broadly.
Visual expression is not meaning.
Nor is meaning reducible to expression.
The relation between them is one of realisation.
Maintaining this distinction is essential if visual semiosis is to be theorised systematically.
Beyond Visual Grammar
A second theme has concerned the widespread search for visual grammar.
The attraction of this project is understandable.
Grammar occupies a central place within the architecture of language.
If images are semiotic, it seems natural to ask whether they too possess a grammar.
Yet this question may be misleading.
The existence of semiosis does not entail the existence of lexicogrammar.
A semiotic system may possess content and expression without reproducing the particular architecture of language.
Visual semiosis therefore invites a different line of inquiry.
Instead of searching for visual clauses, we should investigate visual meaning.
Instead of searching for visual syntax, we should investigate visual systems.
The challenge is not to demonstrate that images are languages.
It is to understand how images function as semiosis.
Metafunction Beyond Language
The series has also argued that metafunction remains indispensable.
Visual semiosis, no less than language, participates simultaneously in:
ideational meaning,
interpersonal meaning,
textual meaning.
These metafunctions do not belong to language alone.
They are principles of semiotic organisation.
Consequently, visual meaning can be investigated from the same metafunctional perspectives that have proved so productive in linguistic analysis.
The result is not a transfer of grammar into visual space.
It is a recognition that semiotic organisation extends beyond language.
Context and Register
A Hallidayan theory of visual semiosis must also take context seriously.
Meaning does not arise within isolated artefacts.
It emerges through participation in social situations.
Visual semiosis therefore stands in the same relation to context as language.
Images do not merely depict contexts.
They realise contextual values.
This observation has important implications for register.
Visual registers are not collections of recurring features.
They are regions of visual meaning potential associated with situation types.
The explanatory task is therefore not to catalogue visual forms but to understand how visual meanings are organised and distributed across contexts.
Photography and the View from Below
Photography provided a particularly revealing case.
The authority of photography rests largely upon the transparency illusion: the belief that photographs simply show reality.
Yet photographs do not escape semiosis.
Their apparent naturalness often conceals the semiotic work they perform.
The transparency illusion therefore mirrors a broader methodological tendency.
It encourages analysis to begin from the visible image itself.
A Hallidayan perspective insists on a different direction of explanation.
The photograph is not explained by what it depicts.
It is explained through its participation in semiosis.
Again, explanation proceeds from above.
What Remains to Be Done
This series has not attempted to provide a completed theory of visual semiosis.
Indeed, one of its conclusions is that such a theory remains largely undeveloped.
Many questions remain open.
What systems organise visual content?
How are visual meanings differentiated?
What expressive systems organise visual form?
How are content and expression related within visual semiosis?
What kinds of registers emerge across different visual domains?
These questions require extensive theoretical and empirical investigation.
The purpose of the present series has been more modest.
It has sought to establish a coherent architecture within which such investigations might proceed.
Reclaiming the Hallidayan Project
As announced at the outset, this series has been concerned with Reclaiming a Hallidayan Approach to Visual Semiosis.
The choice of the word reclaiming was deliberate.
Halliday provided a remarkably powerful account of semiosis.
Yet much of that power derives not from particular analytical techniques but from a distinctive theoretical orientation.
The priority of system over structure.
The priority of content over expression.
The priority of explanation over description.
The priority of the view from above.
These commitments transformed the study of language.
There is no reason they cannot also transform the study of visual semiosis.
What is required is not the extension of linguistic categories into visual domains.
What is required is the application of Halliday's theoretical principles to visual phenomena.
A Final Reflection
The question posed by visual semiosis is not whether images can be analysed like language.
The question is more interesting than that.
What happens when Halliday's theory of semiosis is taken seriously beyond language?
The answer remains unfinished.
But one conclusion already seems clear.
Images are not languages.
They are not failed languages.
They are not incomplete languages.
They are not languages at all.
They are visual semiosis.
And if visual semiosis is approached through the architecture Halliday developed for understanding semiosis itself, a genuinely systemic-functional theory of images may finally begin to emerge.