Subscribe & Follow
Jobs
- Head of Performance Marketing South Africa
- Copywriter Cape Town
- Junior Copywriter Cape Town
- Senior Video Editor Johannesburg
- Creative Director Cape Town
- Head of Social Durban
- Influencer and PR Account Manager Cape Town
- Working Art Director Johannesburg
- Mid-Weight Art Director Cape Town
- Junior Copywriter Cape Town
Only two Gold Eagles go to King James, DDB SA
Winners
- DDB South Africa - Gold Eagle for Campaign (Energizer Batteries); Silver Eagle for Product (Energizer Batteries)
- King James (Cape Town) - Gold Eagle for Best Tactical Use of Medium for the Cape Argus;
- Jupiter Drawing Room (Cape Town) - four Bronze Eagles - two for Best Tactical Use of Medium (Design Indaba 11 and Sanlam Topaz); one for Corporate advertising (only award in this category for Sanlam Private Investments) and one for Campaign (for Sanlam Private Investments)
- Joe Public South Africa - Silver Eagle for Product (Mahindra); Bronze Eagle for Campaign (Mahindra)
- Ogilvy Johannesburg - Silver Eagle for Campaign (Tabasco); Bronze Eagle for Campaign (Greenpeace)
- Saatchi & Saatchi (Johannesburg) - Bronze Eagle for Product (Oil of Olay)
- King James (Johannesburg) - Bronze Eagle for Campaign (Cape Union Mart)
- Volcano Advertising - Bronze Eagle for Campaign (Dewfresh Long Life Milk)
- No awards in Public Service & Charities or Student Categories
There only two Gold Eagles were awarded in what was seen as a stringent judging session by internationally renowned creatives, Erik Vervroegen and Tony Davidson. They noted that the standard, though technically very good, failed to ignite their enthusiasm. The use of visual jokes was not strong enough to engage consumers in a dialogue with the product in the print medium, and so messages were lost amidst a sea of similar adverts.
They added that South African agencies were admired internationally for their skill and craft and that these criticisms were being levelled globally at print advertising. They congratulated all the winners and encouraged them to come back again next year with more determination, creativity and even a spark of guerrilla edginess to ensure that a Black Eagle was awarded - it was not awarded this year.
Breakfast with originality
Another highlight of the Eagle Print Awards was the Breakfast Seminar, at which the judges give South African audiences in Cape Town and Johannesburg a taste of international trends and a glimpse of the future.
Vervroegen opened by shocking his audience with his admission that his agency had failed to repeat its 15 Golden Lion wins at Cannes 2007, only garnering two at Cannes 2008. They had to ask, “What went so wrong, when we thought we had it so right?” In retrospect, they concluded that the work had been slick, unimaginative and predictable.
So Vervroegen put together fantastic ideas in art, design work, graffiti, comics, slogans and even old work from the 70s and the creative team compared that with the work they had produced. This was used to create and present new ideas to their clients.
The breakfast audience was then treated to this amazing slideshow of edgy art, disturbing images and pre-computer pictures that told the story - sometimes shockingly, sometimes amusingly, but more ironically rather than quick, slick humour.
Davidson emphasised the need to surround oneself with creativity through an alliance between unlikely people - street artists, designers and even architects - if it could bring about a riveting collaboration of talent. When he started in the industry, Paul Arden would ask every creative person, “Where's your library?” and so he learnt to collect ideas, tear out vivid images, take photos of memorable doodles and scribbles, even typefaces and fashion designs.
Slideshow
His slideshow illustrated this with designs from the '50s and '60s, modern art, wild architecture, magazine layouts and use of words and typefaces to create spaces and focal points. Davidson particularly highlighted Alexey Brodovitch because he was perhaps the single most powerful influence on the development of practicing artists, designers and photographers of his time, and he left an incomparable legacy of living talent. Alexey's famous lines were ‘break the rules' and ‘astonish me' and this is what Davidson felt was needed in today's advertising.
They concluded by urging everyone to rethink the standard print advertising that sought to capture attention with obvious jokes and quick one-liners and remember that print has to compete against advertising that can offer sound, movement and interaction - the beauty of a still life painting against the movies.