There was a
time long ago when all advertisements that contained visuals were illustrated.
Although that time has long since past, illustration is still being used to
visualize advertising campaigns, adding artistic distinction, style, and
individualism to concepts and content communicated by advertisers. Companies
who commission illustration for their advertisements recognize the advantages illustrations
has over other types of visualization in certain situations, specifically
photography. As a matter of fact, it's the capability of photography to depict
or document a person, place, or thing in a precise manner that can present a disadvantage
in some advertising situations.
Illustrative Advertising Campaign Advantages
Advertising
thrives on creativity, and Illustration as a visualization media, when brought
into the creative problem solving process, can expand the range of conceptual solutions
for advertising messages. Illustration can invent a person who never existed, bring
a dead person back to life, or depict a person whose age, race, or even gender
is not identifiable. It can portray fictional characters, mythological gods, fantastic creatures, devils,
angels, and as in the case of Monty Python and the Holy Grail, even God.
Pictorial Advantages
Illustration
can show what it would be like to walk on the bottom of the ocean, fly through
the atmosphere of Venus, or swallow a cow. It can picture subjects and
communicate concepts that cannot be documented photographically, such as
bipolar disorder; electrons, protons and neutrons in action; how an electronic
circuit works; how the universe began, etc. Illustration can render a building in a
landscape before it has been built.
Stylistic Capability
Through the
application of stylization an illustration can convey exaggeration, attitude,
emotion, expression, and personality. Through artistic methods, it can convey a stylistic uniqueness
that is difficult for photography to impart. Additionally, illustration can
visually simplify and explain confusing or complicated subjects.
Cost Effectiveness
Illustration
can be a very cost efficient way to implement advertising concepts. Especially photographic ones that would require location work, extensive sets, actors, props and post production digital manipulation. Illustration
not only can be used to visualize unreal concepts, it can also be used to
pictorialize photographable subjects at a much lower cost.
Illustrative
Campaign Traits
Creative
advertising concepts aside, there are definitive traits that illustrations
created for a coordinated campaign must exhibit. These traits relate to formal
artistic concerns as much as to conceptual, contextual ones. Composition,
application of media, use of objects, artist’s style, and color treatment must
all be coordinated from one ad to the next.
Composition
Scale and
placement of elements, perspective attitude, and figure/ground relationship are compositional considerations, i.e., the design of the image.
These and other determinations have to be consistently applied to each
individual ad in a set to be identified as a campaign.
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Client: Panasonic. Illustrator: Paul Grelet. Agency: Proximity BBDO, France. |
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Client: Panasonic. Illustrator: Paul Grelet. Agency: Proximity BBDO, France. |
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Client: Panasonic. Illustrator: Paul Grelet. Agency: Proximity BBDO, France. |
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Client: Yuju. Illustrator: Pinata. Agency: hasan & partners, Helsinki, Finland. |
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Client: Yuju. Illustrator: Pinata. Agency: hasan & partners, Helsinki, Finland. |
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Client: Yuju. Illustrator: Pinata. Agency: hasan & partners, Helsinki, Finland. |
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Client: xpixpi. Illustrator: Thomas Damtsios Agency: attp, Athens, Greece. |
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Client: xpixpi. Illustrator: Thomas Damtsios Agency: attp, Athens, Greece. |
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Client: xpixpi. Illustrator: Thomas Damtsios Agency: attp, Athens, Greece. |
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Client: OgilvyOne. Illustrator: Patrick Munyi. Agency: OgilvyOne Worldwide, Africa. |
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Client: OgilvyOne. Illustrator: Patrick Munyi. Agency: OgilvyOne Worldwide, Africa. |
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Client: OgilvyOne. Illustrator: Patrick Munyi. Agency: OgilvyOne Worldwide, Africa. |
Elements
The choice
of elements such as people, characters, objects, and setting reinforce
the visual consistency of an ad campaign. When considering content more than context, subject choices must be consistent. If applicable, this can include season, time of day, and environmental attributes. It can also include surface textures and simulated materials.
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Client: maygreen organic fashion. Illustrator: Sabrina Dibbern. Agency: weigertpirouzwolf
Hamburg, Germany. |
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Client: maygreen organic fashion. Illustrator: Sabrina Dibbern. Agency: weigertpirouzwolf
Hamburg, Germany. |
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Client: maygreen organic fashion. Illustrator: Sabrina Dibbern. Agency: weigertpirouzwolf
Hamburg, Germany. |
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Client: Sarson's. Illustrator: Paul Thurlby. Agency: mcgarrybowen London, UK. |
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Client: Sarson's. Illustrator: Paul Thurlby. Agency: mcgarrybowen London, UK. |
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Client: Sarson's. Illustrator: Paul Thurlby. Agency: mcgarrybowen London, UK. |
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Client: ATSS Keyless Entry Systems. Illustrator: Mark Gmehling. Agency: McCann,
Mumbai, India. |
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Client: ATSS Keyless Entry Systems. Illustrator: Mark Gmehling. Agency: McCann,
Mumbai, India. |
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Client: ATSS Keyless Entry Systems. Illustrator: Mark Gmehling. Agency: McCann,
Mumbai, India. |
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Client: Surfrider Foundation. Illustrator: Pieter van Eenoge. Agency: Y&R, Amsterdam, Netherlands /
Y&R, Paris, France. |
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Client: Surfrider Foundation. Illustrator: Pieter van Eenoge. Agency: Y&R, Amsterdam, Netherlands /
Y&R, Paris, France. |
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Client: Surfrider Foundation. Illustrator: Pieter van Eenoge. Agency: Y&R, Amsterdam, Netherlands /
Y&R, Paris, France. |
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Client: Proctor & Gamble. Illustrator: Amaia Arrazola. Agency: Leo Burnett, Toronto,
Canada. |
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Client: Proctor & Gamble. Illustrator: Amaia Arrazola. Agency: Leo Burnett, Toronto,
Canada. |
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Client: Proctor & Gamble. Illustrator: Amaia Arrazola. Agency: Leo Burnett, Toronto,
Canada. |
Rendering
The choice
of artist’s media, albeit digital, conventional, or mixed, along with the
rendering technique (style of mark making), application of media, and amount of
detail will determine the level of consistency a campaign will exhibit. This is where an illustrator's unique style plays a central role in establishing a unique appearance to a campaign.
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Client: AFS International Programs. Illustrator: Ana Pareja. Agency: Calvo Miami Ad
School, Madrid, Spain. |
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Client: AFS International Programs. Illustrator: Ana Pareja. Agency: Calvo Miami Ad
School, Madrid, Spain. |
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Client: AFS International Programs. Illustrator: Ana Pareja. Agency: Calvo Miami Ad
School, Madrid, Spain. |
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Client: Mai Sushi. Illustrator: Jakaterina Budryte. Agency: Not Perfect | Y&R Vilnius,
Lithuania. |
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Client: Mai Sushi. Illustrator: Jakaterina Budryte. Agency: Not Perfect | Y&R Vilnius,
Lithuania. |
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Client: Mai Sushi. Illustrator: Jakaterina Budryte. Agency: Not Perfect | Y&R Vilnius,
Lithuania. |
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Clint: Copic. Illustrator: Gustavo Dorietto. Agency: FCB Chicago. |
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Clint: Copic. Illustrator: Gustavo Dorietto. Agency: FCB Chicago. |
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Clint: Copic. Illustrator: Gustavo Dorietto. Agency: FCB Chicago. |
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Client: Anjali Kitchenware Fruit Peeler. Illustrator: Rahul Arora. Agency: Makani
Creatives, Mumbai, India. |
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Client: Anjali Kitchenware Fruit Peeler. Illustrator: Rahul Arora. Agency: Makani
Creatives, Mumbai, India. |
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Client: Anjali Kitchenware Fruit Peeler. Illustrator: Rahul Arora. Agency: Makani
Creatives, Mumbai, India. |
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Client: mob fun and food. Illustrator: Eduardo Rosa. Agency: CCZ*WOW, Curitiba,
Brazil. |
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Client: mob fun and food. Illustrator: Eduardo Rosa. Agency: CCZ*WOW, Curitiba,
Brazil. |
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Client: mob fun and food. Illustrator: Eduardo Rosa. Agency: CCZ*WOW, Curitiba,
Brazil. |
Color
Color
methodology, either a natural color, or a pseudo color (invented) color scheme, contributes to the mood and atmosphere of an ad and can have a profound influence on reinforcing a campaign identity. In addition to being an attractor, color can also be used as an indexing device to distinguish the elements within an ad or between ads within a campaign.
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Client: Duracell. Illustrator: Surendra Gohey. Agency: Grey, Mumbai, India. |
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Client: Duracell. Illustrator: Surendra Gohey. Agency: Grey, Mumbai, India. |
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Client: Duracell. Illustrator: Surendra Gohey. Agency: Grey, Mumbai, India. |
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Client: Talidat. Illustrator: Therese Larsson Agency:Grabarz & Partner, Hamburg,
Germany. |
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Client: Talidat. Illustrator: Therese Larsson Agency:Grabarz & Partner, Hamburg,
Germany. |
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Client: Talidat. Illustrator: Therese Larsson Agency:Grabarz & Partner, Hamburg,
Germany. |
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Client: Pfizer Preparation H. Illustrators: Tamas Kovacs, Rajath Ramamurthy Miami Ad
School, Miami, USA. |
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Client: Pfizer Preparation H. Illustrators: Tamas Kovacs, Rajath Ramamurthy Miami Ad
School, Miami, USA. |
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Client: Pfizer Preparation H. Illustrators: Tamas Kovacs, Rajath Ramamurthy Miami Ad
School, Miami, USA. |
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Client: Bulmers Cider. Illustrators: Alan Murray, Thomas Bürden, Duncan Edwards,
Paul Knowles. Agency: Adam & Eve DDB, London, UK. |
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Client: Bulmers Cider. Illustrators: Alan Murray, Thomas Bürden, Duncan Edwards,
Paul Knowles. Agency: Adam & Eve DDB, London, UK. |
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Client: Bulmers Cider. Illustrators: Alan Murray, Thomas Bürden, Duncan Edwards,
Paul Knowles. Agency: Adam & Eve DDB, London, UK. |
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Client: Barkov Vodka. Illustrators: Sarah Kamada, Natalia Theil / Zombie Studio. Agency:
WMcCann, Brazil. |
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Client: Barkov Vodka. Illustrators: Sarah Kamada, Natalia Theil / Zombie Studio. Agency:
WMcCann, Brazil. |
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Client: Barkov Vodka. Illustrators: Sarah Kamada, Natalia Theil / Zombie Studio. Agency:
WMcCann, Brazil. |