Third-year students had to complete an image creation project based on a free subject and medium.
Studio project (2025) by Candice Aepli, Alfredo Venti, Flora Hayoz, Delphine Brantschen, Léa Corin, Marc Facchinetti, Arnaud Wenger, Amélie Bertholet, Lidia Molina González, Emilie Müller, Constance Mauler
A Website is a Room explores the concept of websites as physical spaces, reimagining the digital realm as places with spatial qualities. Each poster visualises the internet as a concept: users, website, network and data. The project questions how we ‘inhabit’ digital spaces, translating digital experiences into environments.
A guide to printing a book by hand explores printing in a prison environment, developing an accessible technique using the materials available in a prison. The aim is to turn constraints into opportunities, by enabling a book to be printed in several copies, where creativity becomes an act of resistance and connection.
1/7
This project explores the intimate, revealing what is usually hidden. It's a conversation about emotions and relationships with objects, recorded and then transcribed. Selected extracts are highlighted and displayed in frames, transforming these words into tangible traces of an ephemeral moment.
Par Constance Mauler
1/4
1/10
Toilet Break Magazine is a travelling, collaborative magazine dedicated to toilets. Each issue explores the relationship that people have with these spaces, which are both communal and intimate. Through personal accounts, a series of images and societal reflections, it highlights issues such as accessibility, urban planning and the sharing of public space. This first issue, conceived in Lausanne, invites us to take a break.
1/14
"Là où dansent les papillons" is a textile book that unfolds on the floor, inviting children to interact physically with the story. By deconstructing the form and narrative of the classic book, it becomes an immersive space where playing, lying down and wrapping oneself up become a form of reading.
Par Candice Aepli
1/3
He has blond hair
and very, very blue eyes
We arrive in Renens
and he's still staring at me
Like every morning
I'm afraid to see him again
Like every morning
Extract from the ‘Comme tous les matins’ edition, which attempts to convey, through light and text, an event that happened on a daily journey from home to school. A photo book of metal plates embossed with lead letterpress.
1/2
1/5