Fast Design wrote a story recently about a Brooklyn artist whose work was seemingly ripped off by UPS and Ogilvy for their outdoor campaign. It's pretty beautiful execution, if it wasn't actually taken from the artist, Ryan Johnson.
The new ads by Ogilvy are on the left, put up in numerous places in Jakarta (interestingly enough, where the artist grew up). Johnson's original work is on the right.
But what confuses me is: if they did steal the visuals here, why not change them up enough where you could still get the idea accross of a moving person? Why keep the identical shape and size of each panel of color, the same staggering pattern, and similar construction? The creative team could have easily appropriated the idea of blurring a subject in their installation, without discrediting their own creativity.
Plenty of other objects can serve as pixels in this ad, illustrated similarly by Lego:


Easy, they hired the guy to make them.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately no, they did not hire him. The artist mentioned another shipping company talking with him years earlier about using the work in a campaign, but that project was never brought to fruition.
ReplyDeleteLol. I had found this same UPS installation and wrote a very brief thought on it. At first I had felt silly for finding the same thing, but I'm glad I got the chance to read yours. It was more research than I had done about the pieces. Poor Ryan Johnson :[
ReplyDeleteWell, I guess we all know what is said about this industry..
I guess will play the "devil's advocate" on this one, even though I completely agree with all of you. But even though Ogilvy's creative team did clearly copy the art, could it just be copying a style. We see this all the time with photography, logo designs, clothing, and the only thing that makes its different is another label or designers name. And also just think how much more exposure this man has gotten from his work being copied by Ogilvy. But I agree UPS should either pull them, or somehow give him compensation or credit.
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