Our work

The British Library / Setting the stage for the masters of Fantasy

You can’t really ask for a more magical brief than developing the proposition and creative identity for a major Fantasy retrospective for the British Library. But what does it take to go from the initial pitch to seeing the creative designs hanging nearly 10 metres tall near the library’s entrance on Euston Road? 

First - a propositional workshop
After winning the competitive tender we began work at the iconic British Library itself, running a ‘Choose your own adventure’-themed proposition workshop designed to harvest as much insight as possible from a project team of curators, event designers, in-house marketers, events and merchandising specialists.  

 This helped us get a strong sense of our audience segmentation, as well as first sight of the immersive, atmospheric exhibition design concepts, and an understanding of the curatorial focus (‘Yes’ to world building, landscapes and culturally diverse depictions of fantasy; ‘nNo’ to fantasy-as-escapism and narrow, traditional male-dominated depictions of the genre.)

Range-finding propositional territories
From this workshop and our wider discovery work, we crafted three propositional territories, a range-finding exercise designed to draw out the views and preferences of the many stakeholders. And from their feedback we crafted our final proposition:  

Naming and framing the exhibition…
This was the springboard for the next phase of creative development covering the exhibition name, a positioning line, and our narrative on a page – all debated at length by a project team deeply invested in the subject matter.   

…before bringing it to glorious life
With this agreed, we were able to progress the visual exploration, which we developed at pace and presented a range of visual ideas. 

The chosen concept was an ‘impossible world’, an illustrated landscape populated by creatures, characters, and scenes from the curators’ wish list of exhibition artefacts. 

This triggered a search for illustrators whose style could capture our singular vision for the event. We chose Sveta Dorosheva, a Ukrainian-born illustrator working in Israel, whose work is influenced by fairytales, mythology and medieval scripts – a perfect fit for our visual execution. 

An exquisitely imagined, impossible world
With Sveta on board, the adventure really began: the process of translating our concept into a staggeringly detailed, exquisite hand drawn and inked illustration featuring a menagerie of no less than 65 fantasy characters and scenes, an Easter egg hunter’s dream. We planned the illustration to represent the four ‘chapters’ of the exhibition itself, and you can see the subtle shifts between landscapes within the illustration itself.  We also included a representation of the British Library’s iconic gateway, as libraries are such a common motif in Fantasy it seemed too good an opportunity to miss.

The style and complexity of the illustration represents the depth and gravitas of the genre, something that was central to the curators’ ambition for the event.

With the core assets completed, we collaborated with the Museum’s in-house design team to help them develop the final campaign executions. Our team over-indexes on Fantasy lovers and seeing work we’re so proud of out there in the public domain is amazing. We hope we’ve done justice to the much loved, multi-layered and ever evolving genre of Fantasy.

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