Hyper-Realistic CGI Ads Are Taking Over Your City, and Your Timeline

Does 'faux out of home' offer a glimpse of the future?

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A giant Barbie towers over Dubai’s business district, unfixing her long limbs from a plastic Mattel box as tall as the Burj Khalifa skyscraper. In London, an underground train car adorned with eyelashes rolls into a station where giant mascara wands coat them with a lick of Maybelline’s Lash Sensational.

These aren’t real ads—they’re CGI creations, and they’re taking over cities across the world. Or, at the very least, they look like they are.

Ian Padgham, a Californian digital artist living in France and founder of production company Origiful, was responsible for the Maybelline work that broke the internet in July.

He’s since coined the term “faux out of home” (FOOH) to describe this new medium: a video format that shows a concept that could exist in real life, but instead is enhanced by CGI.

FOOH offers advertisers and agencies the chance to explore the ambiguity between reality and digital manipulation, along with a shot...

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