Abstract—The essay aims to elucidate the primary patterns in contemporary research on the semiotics of advertising. This text emphasises the unique characteristics of semiotic models in contemporary media advertising, which serve as a kind of visualised commercial communication. It also identifies the potential for the development of advertising semiotics as an independent field within the broader subject of semiotics. Modern advertising is seen as a product of mass culture. It is a cultural artefact that embodies the unique characteristics of postmodern aesthetics, particularly in terms of its meaning and signs. The essay suggests regarding it as an independent field within the realm of semiotics as an academic discipline. The study presented is predominantly theoretical and characterised by generalisations. The writers employed the logical technique of integrative cognition to examine the various ways to interpreting semiotics in the realm of advertising. They also utilised descriptive analysis to demonstrate how the change of signals impacts the ultimate perception of advertising text. Media studies require a fresh approach, such as the semiological technique from the Barthesian perspective, to conduct qualitative analysis at a level that beyond the limitations of the text or picture, which are susceptible to countless interpretations. When utilising the semiological approach to examine media, including both verbal and non-verbal communications such as images, Roland Barthes proposes that a sign is comprised of a signifier and a signified. Barthes argues that images are connected to both aesthetic and ideological elements, which may be analysed and interpreted at a connotative level. This analysis helps to understand how meaning is constructed through intricate semiotic interactions. Therefore, semiotics in media studies employs a diverse range of texts such as photographs, advertisements, and films to equip receivers with the necessary information to analyse and create significant texts and designs in the future.