
Clarity is the new creative
Matt Gillman, Designhouse Design Director on the hot topics and heated design debate at this year’s D&AD Festival. Clarity in the face of complexity, the real creative opportunity AI tools represent, courage over caution, and the benefits of actual human interaction.
Simplicity in creativity is not a new idea. But in a world of accelerating complexity, clarity has become a genuine commercial advantage. Spending two days at D&AD last week, surrounded by people who care deeply about ideas, that tension was visible everywhere.
Global creative community, D&AD, has set the benchmark for creative excellence in advertising and design since 1962. Its Pencil awards remain the industry’s measure of the very best creative work globally. And their annual Festival draws together practitioners, strategists and creative leaders to examine where the industry stands and where it is heading.
Challenging Complexity
The strongest work on show tended to be rooted in ideas that felt, in hindsight, obvious. And that is the point. The real creative challenge is taking the obvious idea and making it singular, embedding it into every touchpoint of a brand. So that product, service, experience, all become inseparable from what the brand actually is. In a landscape flooded with AI-generated creative work that is competent and entirely forgettable, distinctive clarity is the force magnifier.
The harder parallel challenge is convincing clients to commit to it. In a volatile commercial environment, bravery is a difficult sell.
That said, simplicity as an antidote to increasing complexity only takes you so far. Reducing everything to its most legible form can become its own kind of constraint. Complexity itself is not the problem. The problem is complexity that is hard to navigate. The most durable brand systems hold genuine strategic and operational depth within an architecture that feels intuitive to use. Making complexity feel effortless is a more precise ambition than simplicity for its own sake.
What AI makes possible
The industry’s response to AI was the other dominant current running through the festival. There is a pronounced resistance, much of it rooted in the speed and scale of change rather than reasoned opposition. Some of it rooted in an instinctive defence of human craft. The comparison to the arrival of the personal computer and the internet gets made often, and it holds some truth, but the analogy is limited. The pace of what is happening now is of a different order entirely. Regulatory and safety questions deserve serious attention. Creatively, however, the more productive question is, what is it that AI makes possible?
I am more confident that AI tools will support our human creative thinking process, for the better. That they can support our emotional intelligence. A way of problem solving that is better calibrated to human behaviour, more attuned to what actually resonates. AI speeds up production, which should mean more time for creative thinking. And that means that, if used responsibly and purposefully, a truly strong creative will have an enhanced level of emotional resonance with their audience. The industry’s current instinct, to lean harder into craft, tactility and the language of human-made work, reads as much as a defence of identity as it does a creative position.
The case for carbon
For me, my experience at D&AD was creatively energising. Being surrounded by people who genuinely care about ideas reminds you why you love it. D&AD felt truly restorative. A reminder, amongst the pressure, to find the joy in what we do. And to power down the digital world and mingle in the real world, with real people, bouncing ideas off carbon-based lifeforms rather than liquid crystal screens.
The industry demands continuous output, continuous thinking, continuous production. Moments like this, that restore the appetite for imagination are vital. I wonder if the pressure to produce has quietly displaced the space to imagine. And if so, maybe the AI impact that everyone is talking about is simply to free up time to think creatively, to find the clarity in the complexity.
Author: Matt Gillman, Design Director, Designhouse
Designhouse has partnered with FTSE 250 companies and global enterprises for over 50 years. We also work with start ups and scale ups to create brand identities that can grow with their business. If you’d like to discuss your brand challenges, we’re ready to talk.

