The
Integrated Art Collection Dirk Noordam Dr
Th.B.J. Noordman is als universitair docent kunstmarketing verbonden aan
de Erasmus Universiteit van Rotterdam. Zijn onderzoek naar bedrijfscollecties
richt zich op de economische motieven bij het verzamelen, de mogelijke
functie van bedrijfscollecties in promotiecampagnes en de rol van de art
consultant. Hij is auteur van het boek 'Kunstmanagement'. Tevens is hij
organisatieadviseur en interimmanager bij During this symposium we would like to find out the limits to the use of art collections. Gradually the use of the corporate collection has been extended, and nowadays it is employed for at least nine purposes: ideal concerns, selfglorification, selfpresentation, decoration of the wall, training and development, motivation, expression of the corporate culture and p.r. How far can the use of the corporate art collection be extended. Are there no limits to the integration of the art collection? The specific question I would like to answer here is whether the art collection in the near future will be used for communication with customers. Is it to be expected that in the next ten years corporate collections will be used in product advertisements of companies, that own an art collection? Or is the use of the corporate collection for product advertising out of bounds? The
idea of a connection between an art collection and advertising meets with
serious emotional objections. Probably all of us simply do not like the
question, do not even want to listen to whatever answer. We are possessed
by the idea that art is autonomous and should not be used at all. We feel
that art is sacralised (as Pierre Bourdieu has put it) and that it will
be vulgarized by using it. It certainly should not be used in advertising.
But we have to admit that the corporate collection can be put to different
uses. If we really want to look for the limits to the use of corporate
collections we will have to find a way to suppress these emotions. Maybe
the mentioned emotional reflex will disappear if we realise that there
are traditional links between art and advertising and that in the past
artists did not hesitate to use their own works for advertising themselves.
We only have to think of the sixteenth century, when many painters made
prints of their paintings and sent them all over The twentieth century of course has shown us many examples of artists working for the advertising business. Moreover works of individual artists have regularly been used in marketing communication in general and even in advertising. I collected some examples to show the regular use of art in marketing- communication. They might teach us some conditions for the possible use of a corporate collection in product advertising. In the first place art is used for product improvement. This is done by an individual artist in order to position the product in the segment of artlovers. You may think of Room 152, Steigenberger Frankfurterhof or in Amsterdam Hotel 'De Filosoof', where all rooms are decorated by different artists. Secondly art is used for sales promotion. The work of an artist is used as an incentive for buying a product. There are many examples. For the Dutch market I only mention the Corneille pen given to everybody who opened an account with ABN-AMRO bank. Another example is a campaign of the magazine for interior design 'Elle Wonen' which offered tickets for KunstRAI (an important Dutch art fair). Finally art is used for corroborating the brandname. Here the purpose is to attain free publicity and name recognition by association. For this purpose only famous artists are invited. Mouton-Rothschild for instance every year have their labels provided with a painting by a different artist. In the U.S. Hesta properties owns a corporate collection with many Tinguely's, and they use a Tinguely for its mailing labels. What
can we learn from these examples? I think that, although they do not deal
with product advertising as such, they nevertheless show us some interesting
limits to the possible use of corporate collections for product advertising.
The product improvement examples show us, that it is possible to use art
for positioning your product amongst artlovers. For the same token however
you loose those segments of people who do not like modern art. The question
then is how important those segments are for the company. Secondly we
see that in most cases not the collection as such is involved in the communication
effort but the individual artist. Obviously an individual artist has a
larger appeal than the collection in which he or she figures. This lends
force to the supposition, that it will be easier for a particular company
to use an individual artist from the corporate collection for its product
advertising than the collection as such. Finally it will strike you that
the artists used in The
first outcome, which pointed to the possibility of attracting art-lovers
and repelling clients who do not like modern art at the same time, can
be rephrased. If the clients of a company are art-lovers the corporation
probably will not meet with emotional objections when advertising its
collection. However it certainly will run into serious difficulties when
it positions its products on other market segments e.g. soccerfans. So
not all corporate collections can be used for advertising. It depends
to a large extent on the customers. Here we knock upon a second set of
limits: the marketing environment. One of the limits here is the attitude
of the clientele towards art: some marketing environments are art-friendly,
others like the environment of discounters probably are not. The second
limit has to do with the structure of a company. Nowadays many holding-companies
do not use the name of the holding itself in product advertising but use
that costly name only for financial p.r. In The Netherlands Unilever and
Fortis immediately come to my mind. If for branding some particular product
a name is necessary often thereto the name of the daughtercompany, that
will sell the particular product, is used. Now it certainly is not the
case, that corporate collections only belong to companies, that use the
company-name accompanied by a general slogan, like 'We make things better',
for all its forms of communication. Often they are owned by holdings,
that are relatively unknown to the general public, but well-known in financial
circles. It seems not very probable - to me at least - that these corporations
will use the corporate collection for the purpose of product advertising.
Finally, many companies do not market their products to private customers
but sell business to business. If we look at both arguments respectively referring to advertising practice and marketing environments, we are easily inclined to think that we have not any possibilities left for the use of corporate collections in advertising, be it corporate or marketing. Is that right? Paul Mertz lateron will discuss the possibilities of the corporate collection for corporate advertising. It is my target to find possible uses of the corporate collection in product advertising. I will show you that with both arguments we have not yet eliminated all possibilities. Hereto I have to turn both arguments upside down. The first argument, when stated positively, says that any collection with quite a few internationally famous artists might help to position a product among the art-lovers, that is, for simplicity's sake, amongst consumer-groups with a higher income. The second argument states that all companies, that use their company name as a brandname and do not sell business to business might be able to use their corporate collection for communication. But is it possible to use the corporate collection for that specific form of communication, which is product advertising? I will make my next eliminating move. I hereto now divide you, my audience, art historians and curators of a corporate collection into two groups: Those curators, whose organisation only sells one product or one service (e.g. a Credit Insurance Company) or sells products, that are not well defined, like health services, saving services, or risk coverage.
The relevance of this distinction is that with a one-product-company, like Gasunie, communicating the product is more or less identical to communicating the company itself. This means that for a one-product-company product adverti-sing is at the same time corporate advertising. Corporate and marketing communication here are one and the same thing, reason why these curators will be addressed by Paul Mertz. With hospitals, accountants and law firms we meet a new problem. The services delivered are not well defined nor communicated as such. A hospital does not advertise a specific surgical operation and a law firm does not show off with its social insurance lawsuits. As long as the products or services of a particular company with a corporate collection are not well defined, its collection cannot be used in product advertising. This way I have again eliminated a large group of companies. So
finally, we have reached our destination: you, curators that are employed
by a company with many famous artists in its collection; that is not selling
business to business; that uses its company name as brand name and moreover
markets well defined products or services, you will be amongst the chosen!
Will you indeed within ten years be asked by your board to bring forward
your collection in the marketing communication? Or worse, will you be
asked to change your collection in order to use it for marketing communication
purposes. I do not think so, one reason being the danger of `rustle`,
the other the dynamic marketing changes. Now
this is probably not worthwhile, because of the factor `change`. Product
advertising messages change all the time, for reasons of constant product
innovations and ever changing market positions. These changes would make
it necessary to develop new campaigns continuously and to select different
items from the collection all the time. For economic reasons this selection
had better be done by renting the desired works of art from a museum.
After all, I do not expect that within the next ten years the corporate
collection will be used for product advertising.
Maake een keuze uit de volgende sprekers: Erik
Hermida, Onderneming & Kunst
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