Title | #TOARTITSFREEDOM |
Brand | VIENNA TOURIST BOARD |
Product/Service | VIENNA |
Category |
B04. Use of Print or Outdoor |
Entrant
|
WIEN NORD Vienna, AUSTRIA
|
Idea Creation
|
WIEN NORD Vienna, AUSTRIA
|
Additional Company
|
SEITE ZWEI Vienna, AUSTRIA
|
Additional Company 2
|
VIENNA TOURIST BOARD Vienna, AUSTRIA
|
Credits
Bernd Wilfinger |
WIEN NORD WERBEAGENTUR GmbH |
Creative Director |
Edmund Hochleitner |
WIEN NORD WERBEAGENTUR GmbH |
Managing Creative Director |
Judith Kroisleitner |
WIEN NORD WERBEAGENTUR GmbH |
Art Director |
Leopold Kreczy |
WIEN NORD WERBEAGENTUR GmbH |
Copywriter |
Dana Bayomy |
WIEN NORD WERBEAGENTUR GmbH |
Graphic Design |
Philip Jaecklein |
WIEN NORD WERBEAGENTUR GmbH |
Graphic Design |
Katja Oswald-Steinbauer |
WIEN NORD WERBEAGENTUR GmbH |
Account Director |
Stefan Graf |
WIEN NORD WERBEAGENTUR GmbH |
Account Manager |
Markus Mazuran |
WIEN NORD WERBEAGENTUR GmbH |
Account Executive |
Thomas Lichtblau |
wild |
Digital Design & Animation |
Stefan Mayer, Christian Begusch |
seite zwei – branding & design |
Art Direction |
Matthias Hacksteiner |
Fifth Music |
Music/Sound-Design |
Chris Princic |
Awood |
Animation |
Heidi Zehetner |
Vienna Tourist Board |
Head of Marketing |
Claudia Wieland |
Vienna Tourist Board |
Team Manager Campaign Management |
Patrick Hilz |
Vienna Tourist Board |
Project Manager |
Eva Pröglhof |
Vienna Tourist Board |
Project Manager |
Julia Jakoubek |
Vienna Tourist Board |
Project Manager |
Lukas Merl |
Vienna Tourist Board |
Project Manager |
Elisabeth Breuer |
Vienna Tourist Board |
Project Manager |
Marco Magharai |
Vienna Tourist Board |
Project Manager |
Why is this work relevant for Brand Experience & Activation ?
The campaign directly adressed the target audience to engage in an active discussion and gained attention for Vienna and Viennese Modernism. At “#ToArtItsFreedom”, based on the slogan of the Vienna Secession, people’s reactions on all social networks were collected.
Background
Vienna is celebrating “Viennese Modernism 2018”. In order to promote the anniversary the Vienna Tourist Board challenged us to create a provocative campaign that hits a nerve in today’s society. As a result we ignited a discussion by turning a ban on Egon Schiele’s nudes by different marketers in the United Kingdom and Germany as well as online into a debate about the freedom of art. The campaign led to a lot of attention, stimulated discussion and above-average enthusiasm well beyond the target markets in the international press, advertising and industry media as well as in social media.
Describe the creative idea
With provoking Artists such as Egon Schiele, Vienna was ahead of its time around 1900. 100 years after his death we wanted to show that Vienna still celebrates the freedom of art like no other city. By starting a deliberate provocation that ignited a worldwide discussion about the freedom of art.
To showcase Schiele’s explicit paintings in Germany and the UK, various out of home, print and social media placements were booked. And, as intented, promptly rejected by official sources. The world-famous masterpieces were only allowed to be shown with veiled genitals in public. We apologized to viewers for the loss of art enjoyment this caused: “Sorry, a hundred years old. Still too daring today. #ToArtItsFreedom“. The campaign stimulated the audience to engage in an active discussion and gained attention for Vienna and Viennese Modernism.
Describe the strategy
A media experiment that ignited a worldwide discussion about the freedom of art: The Vienna Tourist Board started a deliberate provocation that put the question about the limits of art in our seemingly enlightened society at the centre of its campaign. Out of home, print and social media placements were booked to showcase the world-famous Egon Schiele paintings and the publication was promptly – but intentedly – rejected by official sources.
As expected the masterpieces were not allowed to be shown with unveiled genitals in public in the UK and Germany as well as on several social media platforms.
The campaign was launched with out of home, print and online placements, social media (Facebook, Twitter) and content marketing on local websites.
Target audiences included the general public and people interested in traveling as well as art (especially people aged 25-55 years with an income higher than $2400).
Describe the execution
The world-famous masterpieces were only allowed to be shown with veiled genitals in public and at several social media platforms. We apologized to viewers for the loss of art enjoyment this caused: “Sorry, a hundred years old. Still too daring today. #ToArtItsFreedom“. The campaign stimulated the audience to engage in an active discussion and gained attention for Vienna and Viennese Modernism. At hashtag “ToArtItsFreedom”, based on the slogan of the Vienna Secession, people’s reactions on all social networks were collected.
Even social media platforms dealt with the campaign in different ways. What some platforms permitted was subjected to censorship by others.
The international press also took the campaign as an occasion to join in the discussion about the limits of art and the morals and values of our society. All advertisments led to a microsite showing how far Vienna and its protagonists were ahead of their time: www.viennesemodernism2018.info
List the results
2.9 million Earned Media Value
+ 240 million Earned Media Impressions
+ 7 million Social Media Impressions
+ 80.000 unique visitors to the microsite during the campaign
+ 2.000 contributions under the hashtag during campaign period (the discussion is still on-going on social networks 5 months after the campaign officially ended)
1.7 million overnight stays in Vienna in Jan/Feb 2018
(+ 6.6 % compared to Jan/Feb 2017)
#ToArtItsFreedom puts Vienna in the spotlight. To engage the audience by touching a raw nerve in our seemingly enlightened society aroused interest in Vienna/Viennese Modernism and what it has to offer persons interested in travelling and arts. It also proved that Vienna was and still is ahead of its time as the advertisements could have been shown unveiled in Austria. As a result it manifests Vienna’s position as one of the most liveable and open-minded travel destinations on this planet.