Designers
Type Designers
François Rappo
François Rappo lives and works in Saillon, Switzerland. Rappo studied graphic design in the mid 1970s at the École cantonale des beaux arts (ECBA) in Lausanne, where he specialized in typography. After years of graphic design practice in both the cultural and the corporate fields, he became active in design education. From the mid-1990s, he taught editorial and type design at the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL), where he established the art direction master’s degree program in 2009, which became the type design master’s degree program in 2016. Additionally, Rappo frequently lectures about his typographic practice in Europe, Russia, and the USA. From 2001 to 2007, he was the president of the jury for The Most Beautiful Swiss Books competition. He was awarded the prestigious Jan Tschichold Prize in 2013 for his outstanding achievement in editorial design through his influential typeface designs.
Ludovic Balland
Born in Geneva, Ludovic Balland lives and works in Basel, Switzerland. Balland graduated from the Basel School of Design and notably had Wolfgang Weingart as a teacher. In 2006, he founded the Ludovic Balland Typography Cabinet in Basel, which is now an established graphic design studio specializing in editorial projects for international clients. Balland taught at the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL) for ten years in addition to giving lectures and workshops in Europe and the USA. Balland has been a member of Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI) since 2010 and was awarded the prestigious Jan Tschichold Prize in 2016 for his exceptional work in book design. He has also been awarded the highest international distinctions for his book design.
Malte Bentzen
Originally from Denmark, Malte Bentzen is a type designer who lives and works in Lausanne, Switzerland. Influenced by the strong design and architectural traditions of both countries, Bentzen obtained a Bachelor’s in Visual Communication from the Kolding School of Design in Denmark and completed a Master’s in Type Design at the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL). Since 2020, he has been working at ECAL, first as an Assistant Teacher and is currently managing the school’s foundry: ECAL Typefaces. Throughout Bentzen’s diverse professional endeavors, his main focus has been and continues to be developing and releasing his own typefaces in collaboration with Optimo and the newly established AllCaps foundry.
Valentin Brustaux
Valentin Brustaux lives and works in Zürich, Switzerland. He studied typography at the University of Reading, United Kingdom, successfully earning a master’s degree in typeface design in 2007. Brustaux has worked for many type companies, including Adobe, Monotype, Tiro Typeworks, for various scripts and languages (Cyrillic, Greek, Kannada and Telugu). He received the Type Directors Club Certificate of Excellence in Type Design in 2008 and the Swiss Federal Design Award in 2010 for his typeface Tiina. In 2019, he received the Type Directors Club Certificate of Excellence in Type Design for his typeface Adobe Telugu. Brustaux collaborates with Optimo since 2012 both as licensing expert and type designer.
deValence
deValence is a creation studio based in Paris. The studio was founded by Alexandre Dimos and Gaël Etienne, in 2001, after meeting at the École régionale des beaux-arts de Valence (ESAD). With a diverse skillset, deValence provides expertise in the fields of graphic design, visual communication, and typography, for both print and digital media. Additionally, the studio has been involved in type design. deValence operates in French and European circles and has worked on projects for cultural institutions, publishing houses, and commercial brands. Since 2008, they have run Back Cover, an international magazine about graphic design and typography, and Éditions B42, a publishing house specializing in many topics related to design and typography.
Nicolas Eigenheer
Nicolas Eigenheer grew up on the shore of the lake of Neuchâtel, Switzerland. He now lives and works in Zürich. Eigenheer graduated with a bachelor’s degree in visual communication from the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL). Active both in graphic and type design, he worked at the Gavillet & Rust studio in Geneva from 2006 to 2011, after which he took a position as a book designer at JRP Ringier publishers in Zürich. In 2018, he established his own design practice in Zürich. Nicolas Eigenheer was awarded at the Swiss Federal Design Awards in 2008 for his excellent type and graphic design work. Many of his book designs were recognized among The Most Beautiful Swiss Books over the years, including Peter Halley, Paintings of the 1980s, The Catalogue Raisonné, in 2019.
Julien Gaillardot
Born in France, in the Grésivaudan valley located in the French Alps, Julien Gaillardot studied graphic design at the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL). Since 2002, he has been working as an independent graphic designer in Avignon, where he has been involved in many publications and cultural design projects. He regularly collaborates with the atelier nomades, a multidisciplinary studio engaging in architecture, design, landscape architecture, and urbanism projects.
Gavillet & Rust
Gavillet & Rust was the partnership between Gilles Gavillet and David Rust—until Rust’s tragic death in 2014. Gavillet and Rust met while studying at the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL) and they started to collaborate on typeface designs during a stay at the Cranbrook Academy of Arts, in 1997. It was at Cranbrook where they developed their first typeface together, Detroit MM. Specializing in editorial design and visual identities, Gavillet & Rust developed many typefaces which have been used in their graphic design projects and later commercialized through Optimo Type Foundry. Additionally, both have taught at ECAL. Gavillet & Rust has received many distinctions for their work, including the prestigious Jan Tschichold Prize in 2006 for their outstanding achievements in book design and the Swiss Grand Award for Design in 2012. Their work has been featured and exhibited around the world.
Joost Grootens
Joost Grootens established his design studio in Amsterdam, Netherlands with a second location in Biel/Bienne, Switzerland. Grootens studied architectural design at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy and is a self-taught graphic designer. With an emphasis on data visualization, Studio Joost Grootens specializes in book design in the field of architecture, urban space, and art for international publishers and institutes. Grootens is head of the master’s of information design program at the Design Academy Eindhoven. He has also lectured at various institutions in Asia, Europe, and North America. Grootens is the recipient of numerous awards for his work, among them the Golden Letter and two Gold Medals in the Best Book Design From All Over the World competition. He was awarded the Rotterdam Design Prize in 2009 and he has been a member of the Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI) since 2010. A monograph about his work, I swear I use no art at all was published by 010 Publishers in 2010.
Maximage
Maximage is a loose structure of designers revolving around Julien Tavelli and David Keshavjee who met studying at the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL). Established in 2008, in Switzerland, the studio is now located between London, Zurich and Geneva. Active in the fields of corporate, type, and editorial design, the studio’s work is often connected with an innovative and sensitive attitude toward technology and technique. Since 2008, Maximage has been holding typography and graphic design workshops at ECAL. The celebrated book, Typeface as Program, which was published by ECAL in 2009, is an account of their work process and the result of an experimental typography project accomplished during their studies. They are also involved in the research project Workflow developed at ECAL for which a database of color profiles was generated. The studio was awarded at the Swiss Federal Design Awards in 2011 for their remarkable work.
Team’77
Team’77 is André Gürtler, Christian Mengelt, and Erich Gschwind’s design partnership. Active in type design for more than forty years with international clients and foundries, they have been awarded the Swiss Grand Award for Design in 2015 for their outstanding achievement in typography with the creation of typefaces such as Alpin Gothic, Cyrillic Gothic, Avant Garde Gothic Oblique, Media, Signa, and Unica77.
André Gürtler studied at the Basel School of Design under Emil Ruder. He worked as a letterer for the Monotype Corporation in Salford in 1959 and with Adrian Frutiger at Debergny & Peignot in Paris between 1956 and 1965. Gürtler taught at the Basel School of Design until 2000. He is the founder of the ATypI committee for research and education and has been a long-term collaborator and member of the editorial team of the Typografische Monatsblätter journal.
Christian Mengelt studied graphic design at the Basel School of Design under Armin Hofmann. He collaborated with Karl Gerstner on projects such as Gerstner Programm and Swissair Futura. From 1972 to 2001 he taught type and graphic design at the Basel School of Design and has been head of the Fachklasse für Grafik since 1986. Mengelt has been a guest lecturer and held seminars and schools across Europe, the USA, and Mexico.
Erich Gschwind trained as a compositor and then studied typography and book printing at the Basel School of Design under Emil Ruder. He worked as a typographic designer in various printing houses and was responsible for corporate design at the medical science publisher S. Karger AG in Basel, for which he designed numerous scientific publications.
Davide Tomatis
Davide Tomatis is currently living and working in his hometown, Turin, Italy. He holds a bachelor in graphic design from the Polytechnic University of Turin, and obtained a master’s degree in type design at the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL). Since 2012, he has been collaborating with Archivio Tipografico which is one of the biggest Italian letterpress printshops and typographic archive. Besides, Tomatis is working in the field of graphic and type design with international clients as an independent freelancer and also as a member of the Studio 23.56. He teaches typography at Istituto d’Arte Applicata e Design (IAAD), in the Visual Communication bachelor, in Turin.
Chi-Long Trieu
Chi-Long Trieu grew up in Fribourg, Switzerland. He now lives in Lausanne and often works with international design studios. Trieu graduated with a bachelor’s degree in visual communication from the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL). With experience at Maximage, Bureau Mirko Borsche, Gavillet & Cie, and Optimo, Trieu is an accomplished type and graphic designer. In 2016, with his brother Chi-Binh, he co-founded his own studio, Office for Typography, based in Switzerland and in Japan, through which he works on graphic design and type design projects. Trieu has been teaching at ECAL since 2014 and since 2015, he has been a lecturer at EPFL+ECAL Lab.