Last night (9/10), the 58th D&AD Awards ceremony took place in a virtual fashion, where four Black Pencils–the competition’s highest honor, reserved for groundbreaking work–were awarded. Designed by Studio Dumbar and hosted by D&AD president Kate Stanners, the virtual ceremony was an opportunity for the creative industry to come together, celebrate great work and give the creative community the platform it deserves during an exceptionally challenging year.
The 2020 Black Pencil winners are as follows:
- INGO Stockholm/David Miami/Publicis Bucharest in PR for its "Moldy Whopper" campaign for Burger King. A campaign showing its iconic Whopper molding for up to 35 days to powerfully convey the absence of additives in Burger King products.
- FCB Chicago in Book Design for its work on The Gun Violence History Book for Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence. The book draws attention to a loophole in US law that enables gun violence and visually captures how there has been so much gun violence in America that if it was all captured in a book, it would probably stop a bullet.
- FCB/SIX in Digital for its "Go Back To Africa" campaign for Black & Abroad. A pan-African tourism campaign that turns the racial slur “go back to Africa” into an uplifting call to action.
- Family Type in Typography for developing Universal Sans, a variable typeface that allows for an extensive range of customization and unique variations, making flexible and adaptable type available to a wider audience. Universal Sans is the first Typography entry to win a Black Pencil.
Following a campaign leading up to the 2020 Awards Ceremony that looked back at the last 10 years of Black Pencils, D&AD revealed during the ceremony that Rivers of Light was voted the industry’s overall favorite and Advertising Black Pencil of the decade, a campaign illuminating rivers with luminous messages for soldiers in Colombia. Viva la Vulva was awarded Craft Black Pencil of the Decade, whereas Palau Pledge won for the Design categories.
President’s Award
This year’s President’s Award, reserved for true industry heroes, was awarded to Yuya Furukawa, CCO at Dentsu, for his outstanding contribution to creativity.
D&AD president Stanners commented: “Yuya is the embodiment of creativity. His curiosity and desire to collaborate has meant his influence has reached far and wide. He has led Dentsu on a journey of exploring how creativity can problem solve, not just through advertising but with multiple outcomes. He has relentlessly supported and promoted young talent, and is a great ambassador for the Japanese creative industry and likewise international creativity to Japan.”
Companies of the Year
The top ranking advertising winners of the year are:
- 1. DAVID Miami
- 2. Dentsu Tokyo
- 3. INGO Stockholm and Publicis Bucharest (joint third place)
The top ranking design winners of the year are:
- 1. FCB Design Group
- 2. Tom Sharp
- 3. The New York Times Magazine
The top ranking production winners of the year are:
- 1. Iconoclast Paris
- 2. Framestore Los Angeles
- 3. Stink Films
The top ranking clients of the year are:
- 1. Burger King
- 2. Apple
- 3. Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence
Final Design categories
During the ceremony, D&AD also announced the winners for the final design categories:
● Book Design – 14 Pencils: 1 Black, 2 Yellow, 3 Graphite, 8 Wood
● Graphic Design – 60 Pencils: 5 Yellow, 14 Graphite, 41 Wood
● Magazine & Newspaper Design – 20 Pencils: 2 Yellow, 7 Graphite, 11 Wood
● Packaging Design – 23 Pencils: 1 Yellow, 3 Graphite, 19 Wood
In total, 618 Pencils were awarded during D&AD Judging 2020. The number of Pencils awarded by level are as follows:
● Black Pencil – 4 Pencils
● Yellow Pencil – 68 Pencils
● Graphite Pencil – 150 Pencils
● Wood Pencil – 384 Pencils
● Next Pencil – 5 Pencils
● Side Hustle Pencil – 2 Pencils
● Collaborative Pencil – 2 Pencils
● Shortlisted – 377 entries
For information on the 2020 Pencil winning entries, click here.
Results by country
The United States was the most awarded country at this year’s D&AD Awards, followed by the United Kingdom in second place and Japan in third.
Rounding out the top 10 are in order: Germany, Brazil, France, Sweden, Canada, Australia and Romania.
Dara Lynch, D&AD COO, commented, “This year, the global creative community deserved more than ever an opportunity to collectively celebrate the power of creativity. While we were disappointed to not be able to host our annual festival and ceremony, we believe that the virtual ceremony continued to recognize outstanding work from the past year and create a moment of unity for the industry. We are delighted to be able to award four Black Pencils this year to work that is truly pushing the boundaries. Looking forward, we will all rely on creative thinkers to help us through this pandemic, so it is vital that we celebrate and stimulate creativity at every chance we get.”