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Digital Camera World
Digital Camera World
Tom May

This award-winning example of commercial photography highlights the power of a brilliant concept

A split image showing two people in American Gothic style holding a "SOLD" sign on the left, and the same two people next to a pool in a mid-century modern scene on the right.

In a housing market obsessed with virtual tours and drone footage, two creative minds proved that sometimes the most effective real estate marketing looks nothing like real estate marketing at all.

Yi Han and Yaorong Lu claimed the Discovery of the Year 2025 title at the Tokyo International Foto Awards with The Art of the Ideal Deal – a clever series that inserts two real estate agents into reimagined versions of iconic artworks, ranging from the Renaissance solemnity of Jan van Eyck's Arnolfini Portrait to the sun-drenched optimism of Edward Hopper's Cape Cod Morning.

The premise is brilliant in its simplicity: just as masterpieces endure across centuries, the right home never loses its value.

Technical execution

Han and Lu shot the entire series on the Nikon Z8, using a 60mm focal length at f/8 and 1/125 second: settings that prioritized sharpness and depth of field across both subjects and their carefully constructed environments.

The Z8's 45.7MP stacked sensor proved ideal for this work, delivering the resolution necessary for large-format advertising while maintaining the color fidelity crucial for recreating the specific palettes of famous paintings.

The Nikon Z8 (Image credit: Digital Camera World)

The choice of f/8 ensures both agents remain in sharp focus while maintaining sufficient background detail to sell the environmental illusion.

At 60mm, a moderate focal length that avoids wide-angle distortion, the perspective remains natural and portrait-friendly, keeping the human subjects front and center without the unflattering characteristics that can plague wider lenses.

More broadly, the Z8's high dynamic range allowed for nuanced shadow and highlight retention; essential when matching the tonal qualities of paintings that span vastly different artistic periods and lighting approaches.

Creative brilliance

What elevates this campaign most, though, is its conceptual clarity. Real estate marketing typically trades in aspirational lifestyle imagery: happy families, sun-dappled interiors, carefully staged vignettes. The Art of the Ideal Deal sidesteps these clichés in a refreshingly fun way.

Each image echoes the original artwork, while adding contemporary touches that bridge past and present.

Wood's American Gothic gets reimagined with the agents holding a "sold" sign rather than a pitchfork. Hopper's Cape Cod Morning transforms into an open house. Hockney's California modernism becomes a backdrop for contemplating property listings.

Two images from the campaign, parodying Arnofini Portrait by Jan van Eyck and Cape Cod Morning by Edward Hopper (Image credit: Yi Han and Yaorong Lu)

The production values required here are not to be sneezed at. Period-appropriate costumes, precise lighting that mimics various painting styles, careful color grading; every element contributes to the illusion while maintaining the playful tone.

More than that, though, it's a reminder that memorable marketing images often work best if they don't look like marketing. In an attention economy where we all scroll past thousands of conventional ads daily, The Art of the Ideal Deal stops the thumb with a sense of genuine visual surprise.

The Nikon Z8 provides the technical foundation, but creative vision transforms what could have been straightforward headshots into conversation-starting imagery that transcends its commercial origins.

The series stands as proof that even in commercial contexts, photography can be witty, artful and memorable. And that sometimes the best way to sell something timeless is to place it in conversation with timelessness itself.

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