Iconic German Contemporary Artist Jonathan Meese Creates Artwork for New issue of TWELVE magazine

Iconic German Contemporary Artist Jonathan Meese Creates Artwork for New issue of TWELVE magazine

Feb. 09, 2021

TWELVE magazine was initially launched by the Serviceplan Group’s House of Communication in Munich in 2015 as an individual annual review for the brand, media and communications industry. Conceived as a coffee-table magazine, it embraces the power of print and offers insights into the inspiring personalities and topics that have defined the past year and showcases the portfolio of Serviceplan Group, Europe’s largest partner-managed agency group, in an innovative way.

Reflecting the twelve months of a year, each issue comprises twelve chapters on topical matters, curated by prominent external guest authors and experts from the ranks of the Serviceplan Group. The current issue themed “Rethink“ includes articles by the chairman of the German Council of Economic Experts, Professor. Lars P. Feld; Facebook’s Vice President Central Europe Angelika Gifford; the entrepreneurs Dr. Thomas Strüngmann and Stefan Hipp; Beiersdorf supervisory board member Prof. Manuela Rousseau; brain researcher Prof. Gerald Hüther; and top investor Eileen Burbidge on subjects such as Future Mindset, Leadership, Culture of Innovation, Brand Management, Economic Policy and The New Digital.

  • Innovative, creative design by Jonathan Meese

With TWELVE’s visual concept, the design of the magazine has also ventured into pastures new. Espousing the notion that in the fine arts the creative process starts with a blank canvas and neither style, technique, form nor colour is predetermined, artist Jonathan Meese was given a completely free hand in the design. He was presented with all the texts and photos ready to go but with no guidelines, so that he could design something creatively new.

Jonathan Meese says about his work:

“Only art is the future. I have redesigned TWELVE magazine with the ART of love, using the freest possible range of all my resources. Overlaid with the most art-loving painting, TWELVE magazine can become the toy of the future”. Internationally famous, Meese embodies the main theme of “Rethink!” like no other artist. As a force for radical change, he has turned the current issue of TWELVE into an extraordinary, exclusive work of art."

 

Florian Haller, CEO Serviceplan Group, says:

“The black swan bequeathed us an unprecedented year beset with challenges in the form of 2020. But like every crisis, the pandemic also contains an opportunity. In its full impact, it forces us to question what we have done in the past and to consider whether it can create something new. We want to encourage and inspire this kind of rethinking in the new issue of TWELVE, through the contributions of our fantastic authors as well as through the unique artwork of Jonathan Meese.”

Related News

Jun. 15, 2026

MediaMarktSaturn and Serviceplan Group Launch Future-Ready Model for Marketing Production

The transformation ambition behind this new model is to consistently advance MediaMarktSaturn’s "Experience Retail" strategy

Mar. 20, 2026

Studio Private Brings Boldness and Precision to Daniel Sannwald's Seamless Calvin Klein Spring 2026 Campaign Images

Studio Private collaborated closely with Sannwald on the retouch of the campaign stills

Mar. 17, 2026

A Brand That Never Sleeps - Span's Brand Pulsates 24/7

Span, an IT company, has built its identity around a dynamic, real-time display of security alerts and support requests, emphasizing its commitment to continuous client care and protection from cyber-attacks

Latest News

Jun. 19, 2026

Territorial Credits Open Swim & Creative Partners Following Webby Award Win for Centivo's "How Dare We" Campaign

The campaign was brought to life through a collaboration between Centivo, territorial, Open Swim, Lotis Bloom, and Grow As Media

Jun. 19, 2026

Oxford Road Debunks Persistent Ad Performance Myths Plaguing Entertainment & Media Podcasts

New ORBIT ranking proves that advertisers can find success by buying the show, not the genre