Celebrity Revolution — Campaign Art Direction for a $500M Fleet Transformation
Role: Art Director | Client: Celebrity Cruises | Scope: Multi-Channel Campaign · OOH · Digital · Print | Year: 2018–2019Brief
Celebrity Cruises was about to announce one of the biggest investments in cruise industry history — a $500 million program to modernize its entire legacy fleet. The challenge: build a teaser campaign that generated excitement for a transformation that hadn't happened yet. No finished ships. No hero photography. No completed spaces to show. Just the promise of something remarkable coming.
Creative Challenge
The core tension was credibility vs. anticipation. The campaign had to feel premium and confident — worthy of a $500M announcement — while deliberately withholding the reveal. Every asset had to build desire without showing the product. We couldn't rely on renderings that might change, or photography that didn't exist yet. The visual system had to carry the weight of the story on its own.
MY CONTRIBUTION
Working alongside the Creative Director and copywriting team, I led art direction across the full campaign asset suite — concepting the visual approach, directing the motion and static executions, and ensuring every touchpoint from bus wraps to email headers read as a single cohesive system. My focus was translating the campaign's "transformation" narrative into a design language that felt aspirational without being vague: precision typography, cinematic imagery, and a restrained color palette that positioned the Revolution as a luxury event, not just a refurbishment.
$500M
Campaign Scope9+ SHIPS
Fleet NarrativeMulti-Channel
Print, Digital, OOHTHE OUTCOME
The teaser campaign successfully reframed Celebrity Cruises' aging Solstice-class fleet as a luxury reinvention story — shifting perception before a single ship had been touched. The visual system I helped develop became the foundation for the Revolution's long-term brand narrative, running across channels for multiple years as each ship was progressively modernized. By the time the first revolutionized ships launched, the audience already knew what the Revolution meant.

