Castello: Eat the Art

Castello: Eat the Art

Cheese brand Castello teams up with ad agency Duval Guillaume to give New Yorkers the opportunity to taste their cheese in a very original way. A pop-up museum is set up at Grand Central Terminal, where famous still-life paintings that contain cheese are reproduced with great precision using real Castello cheeses. The difference is simple. You can smell and eat the copied works of art.

Over the course of two days, more than 500,000 visitors reportedly pass through the exhibition, and around 40,000 people actually taste the cheese.

Turning “look” into “taste”

The mechanism is sensory sampling disguised as culture. Borrow the credibility of recognizable art, rebuild it with the product itself, then let the audience complete the experience by tasting the thing they are looking at.

In urban retail environments where people are overloaded with visual messages, multisensory experiences create disproportionate stopping power because they feel like a break from advertising, not another ad unit.

Why it lands

This works because it turns product trial into a story people want to repeat. A free sample is forgettable. “I ate a painting made of cheese at Grand Central” is social currency, which means it is a simple story people want to pass on. It gives the brand an earned reason to be talked about without needing heavy branding on every surface.

Extractable takeaway: If your category wins on taste, do not hide behind claims. Build a public moment where trying the product feels like participating in something bigger than a sample.

What the business intent looks like

The real question is how to turn food sampling into a public moment people actively choose and then talk about. Castello gets scale and relevance in one move. Grand Central delivers footfall. The art framing delivers permission to pause. And the tasting converts attention into the only proof that matters for food. “It is good”. This is a stronger food-marketing move than standard sampling because it makes trial memorable.

What food brands can steal from this

  • Wrap sampling in a reason to stop. People do not queue for “try this”. They queue for a moment.
  • Use a familiar cultural code. Still-life paintings are instantly legible, even at walking speed.
  • Let the product be the medium. When the product is literally the artwork, the message cannot be missed.
  • Design for retellability. If the experience can be summarized in one sentence, it travels further.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Castello “Eat the Art”?

It is a pop-up museum experience where still-life paintings featuring cheese are recreated using real Castello cheeses, and visitors can smell and taste the “art”.

Why stage it in Grand Central Terminal?

Because high footfall increases reach, and a transit setting makes the surprise feel bigger. You find a museum moment in the middle of a commute.

Is this advertising or sampling?

It is sampling, delivered through an ambient, cultural format that makes the trial feel special rather than transactional.

What makes the concept effective for food brands?

It converts attention into taste. Food marketing becomes more persuasive when it gets people to try the product quickly, in a memorable context.

What is the simplest way to adapt the pattern?

Pick a familiar cultural frame your audience already respects, then embed product trial directly into that frame so trying the product feels like participation.

KLM: Live High Five

KLM: Live High Five

On 28 August, KLM connects hundreds of people in Amsterdam and New York via a live interactive video display, letting strangers on the streets of two cities come face to face.

It echoes the kind of “city to city” street connection seen before, such as the French railway (SNCF) linking Lyon and Brussels.

How the high five contest works

The twist is competitive: the connected pairs are asked to high five each other through the screens. For every successfully timed high five, participants win two tickets to New York or Amsterdam.

In global travel marketing, adding a clear participatory mechanic, meaning a simple action anyone can attempt without instruction, turns a “nice moment” into a repeatable behavior people recruit others into.

Why a high five is the right interaction

A high five is universally understood and visually obvious at distance. It is also time-bound, which creates tension. People lean in. They coordinate. They try again. That retry loop, the quick cycle of attempt, miss, adjust, and try again, is where energy builds and the crowd becomes part of the content.

Extractable takeaway: Pick an interaction that is instantly readable to bystanders, time-bound, and designed to invite visible retries. That is how the crowd becomes the amplification.

What KLM is really buying here

This is a route brand idea, meaning a story that makes a specific connection between two places feel tangible, disguised as play: KLM makes the transatlantic connection feel immediate, human, and winnable. The real question is whether your activation makes distance feel collapsible in under five seconds. This is the right kind of public interactivity when your promise is connection between places. The prize is valuable, but the real asset is the public proof that the brand can engineer connection between two cities in a way passers-by can instantly grasp.

Patterns to borrow for your own city-scale activation

  • Use one gesture everyone knows. The simpler the action, the more strangers will attempt it without instruction.
  • Add a timing challenge. Time-based coordination creates drama and repeat tries.
  • Make the reward match the story. Here, tickets reinforce the “two cities” premise.
  • Design for crowds. The best interactions are legible to bystanders, not just participants.

A few fast answers before you act

What is KLM Live High Five in one line?

A live video street installation connecting Amsterdam and New York where timed high fives between cities unlock travel tickets.

What is the key mechanism?

Two public screens link strangers in real time, then convert the connection into a simple, repeatable contest action.

Why does the high five mechanic work so well?

It is universal, physical, and instantly readable. The timing requirement creates suspense and encourages repeated attempts.

What is the biggest execution risk?

If timing feedback feels laggy or unclear, people stop retrying. The interaction needs instant, visible confirmation so the crowd stays invested.

What is the transferable lesson?

If your idea is “connection”, make people physically coordinate across distance and reward the moment with a prize that matches the narrative.

Ikea PS 2014 Instagram Website

Ikea PS 2014 Instagram Website

You open Instagram and land on Ikea_ps_2014. The grid does not look like a typical brand feed. Each tile behaves like a navigation button. Benches. Tables. Storage. You tap a category image, reveal hidden tags, and jump straight into product views. Instagram becomes the website.

The idea. A catalog built inside Instagram

Ikea has made a name for itself as a trustworthy and affordable source of stylish home decor. In Russia, to promote the PS 2014 collection, Ikea teams up with Moscow-based agency Instinct to approach Instagram in an entirely new way.

How it works. Categories in the grid, products in the tags

The Ikea_ps_2014 Instagram account serves as the campaign website. Each post represents a product category like benches or tables. When you tap a category image, hidden tags reveal “links” to the products within that category.

Here, “hidden tags” are simply Instagram photo tags used as tap targets, so navigation stays inside native Instagram behavior.

Every one of the 34 items in the collection also receives its own Instagram account. For example ps_laptop_station and ps_side_table.

The real question is whether you can turn a platform habit into structured product discovery without forcing people out of the app.

In consumer brands promoting a collection across many items, this pattern uses a social grid as a lightweight category tree.

Why it matters. An app used beyond its intended design

The Instagram app is certainly never meant to be an Ikea catalog website. The mechanism is simple: category posts behave like menu tiles, and tags behave like links, so thumbs do what they already do in Instagram. That is why the experience feels like browsing, not “clicking out”. This is worth copying when the native UI can carry the journey end-to-end, not when you need heavy comparison, configuration, or checkout.

Extractable takeaway: If a platform already has a grid, a tag system, and a tap habit, you can repurpose those primitives into navigation and keep discovery inside one familiar surface.

Where it connects. Earlier “feed as experience” examples

Earlier this year, Mazda and JWT Canada turned the car-maker’s Instagram feed into an interactive road trip, replacing specs with images and videos that followed the vehicle on an epic adventure. Over the course of four months, the campaign “Long Drive Home” helped grow Mazda Canada’s Instagram following by more than 300%.

Similarly, the Toronto Silent Film Festival turned its feed tsff2014 on its side, creating an interactive timeline complete with factoids and video clips to celebrate Charlie Chaplin’s 100 years on film.

What to copy from this build

  • Start with categories. Treat the grid as a menu so users can self-select a path.
  • Use tags as links. Turn existing tap targets into jumps to deeper product views.
  • Keep the journey native. Let the platform’s follow, view, and tag behaviors do the work.
  • Design for scan first. Make each tile legible as navigation, not just as content.

A few fast answers before you act

What is the Ikea PS 2014 Instagram website?

A campaign that uses an Instagram account as a navigable catalog. Grid posts act as categories, and photo tags act as links to product accounts.

How do people navigate it?

Users tap category images in the grid, reveal the photo tags, and jump to specific product pages inside Instagram.

What is the key execution detail?

Each PS 2014 product gets its own Instagram account, so exploration happens via Instagram’s native follow, view, and tag behaviors.

Why does this work on mobile?

It turns a familiar mobile habit, browsing a feed, into structured discovery without forcing users into a new interface.

What is the transferable pattern?

Treat platform constraints as UI elements. Build navigation out of what the platform already provides instead of fighting it.