Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Social Media Campaigns


Levi and Water Org: Levi’s Water Tank
 
 

Surrealist Techniques in Advertising


After a seminar about surrealist visual language I found out that there are several most popular techniques being used in contemporary advertising: photomontage, metamorphosis, displacement, disruption etc.

Here I have same examples of adverts being created with the usage of these techniques:

Juicy Couture (photomontage)





Friday, 9 November 2012

Pret A Manger's Core Values


There are three core values that have always remained true to the brand and they all stem around passion. First and foremost, we are passionate about food and keeping it fresh and interesting. This is our core product and we work hard to produce the best we can. It would be easier to get tubs of guacamole instead of cutting fresh avocados in each kitchen in each shop but we stick to quality and taste.

Visual Methodologies


To analyse how the meaning in ad is created I have chosen one of the Pret A Manger’s adverts - the brand I’m going to use for my brief.
 
 

Art & Copy (2009)




Despite the fact that the “Art & Copy” documentary was made by Doug Pray in 2009, issues raised in the film are still relevant.
The documentary reveals the work of some of the most influential advertising creative of 20th century, such as: David Kennedy (Wieden +Kennedy), George Lois (Tommy Hilfiger), Phyllis K. Robinson (original copy chief, Doyle Dane Bernbach), Jim Durfee (co-founder, Carl Ally Inc), Mary Wells (founder, Wells Rich Greene), Lee Clow (TBWA\Chiat\Day) and others. These professionals were responsible for legendary ads: "Just Do It," "I Love NY," "Where's the Beef?," "Got Milk," "Think Different" etc.

The movie tells us a story of the creative advertising development and introduces some core principles of advertising.
Famous Doyle Dane Bernbach advertising agency has been founded in 1950s. There were only 14 people all together. They couldn’t anticipate how big and important their business is going to be.

In 1960s Bill Bernbach made a revolution in advertising by putting an art director and a copywriter to work in a same room – this has never been done before. This innovation allowed creatives to work more efficiently and provide a higher quality adverts.
Sometime ad is not about product and its qualities. It is just some humour and people want to become a part of this community (For instance, the “Whassup” campaign for Budweiser). And the power of emotions in this kind of ads is very important.

Personally speaking, the “Art & Copy” documentary gave me awareness that good advertising can be a part of our culture rather than some sorts of pollution people consider it. By making ads, we are creating an atmosphere that makes us comfortable, or makes us concerned, or gets a reaction out of us. All creative are messengers of ideas to society.
 
 

Friday, 2 November 2012

Myths and ideology in ads

Myths

 

Taxotere

 The Taxotere’s ad is a tableau of Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People. Pink silk flags substitute for sabres, muskets, pistols, and tricolour in the original painting to evoke the pink ribbons of the (drug industry sponsored) breast cancer awareness campaign. It implies that commitment and belief are more important than blades and bullets in the fight against breast cancer, a message simplified by removing the naked and dead littering the foreground of original.