Andrea
Dominguez

Projects

Rationality/Expressivness - Carnal Verona Workshop

GRAPHIC DESIGN

Rationality/Expressivness - Carnal Verona Workshop

with Yanis Carnal, Raphaël Verona

The Swiss style, also known as the International Style, established itself as the symbol of a radical approach to graphic design and typography. It embodies an ideal of efficiency and rationality. Omnipresent more than half a century after its emergence, does it still hold the same relevance today? What is its influence on our imaginations and our practice? Doesn't Switzerland have other facets through which to communicate, and what new graphic and typographic languages ​​could represent them?

Création d'image - Double Reading - BA1 2025-2026

GRAPHIC DESIGN

Création d'image - Double Reading - BA1 2025-2026

with Guy Meldem

First-year students were invited to design a 16-page publication. By experimenting with duotone through various printing techniques, they structured a dual reading experience dependent on the printed colors.

Editorial Design - Great Expectations - BA1 S1 2025-2026

GRAPHIC DESIGN

Editorial Design - Great Expectations - BA1 S1 2025-2026

with Harry Bloch

During the editorial design course with Harry Bloch, the first-year students each laid out a chapter of Charles Dickens' Great Expectations. A final edition compiling all the chapters was produced for the occasion.

Visual Identity - Cut & Paste  - BA1 S1 2025-2026)

GRAPHIC DESIGN

Visual Identity - Cut & Paste - BA1 S1 2025-2026)

with Adeline Mollard

During the visual identity course, the 1st year of the Graphic Design bachelor had to carry out a poster project from a random event. They had to define their own visual system and explored a search for hand-made typographic posters. The visual identity of the event was developed through a poster and a flyer, accompanied by a research notebook grouping their entire creative process.

Type Design - BA1 S1 2025-2026

GRAPHIC DESIGN

Type Design - BA1 S1 2025-2026

with Robert Huber

First-year students were invited to manually sketch the typographic skeleton of lowercase alphabet letters. The objective was to maintain the proportions, curves, and characteristic axes of each letter while paying close attention to visual coherence and consistency in the drawing.