Rosemarie Tissi is a talented European graphic designer based in Zurich. She is known for her unique Postmodernism Swiss style designs and typography.

She did extensive studies at the Zurich School Of Design and then completed a four-year apprenticeship as a graphic designer with Siegfried Odermatt, a master of Swiss graphic design.

As an impressive typographer while completing her studies her work was published in legendary magazine Neue Grafik

Folder for the company Anton Schöb

In 1968 she set up a studio collective with Odermatt called Odermatt & Tissi. The studio mainly focused on printed matter, posters, and custom typefaces for clients from the cultural and public fields.

During her career she moved from a Modern attitude to an individualistic graphic language that expresses her personality through dynamic layouts, vivid colors, and type experiments. 

Tissi went on to become one of the most important female graphic designers of the 20th century. She really did it all creating work for poster, banknotes, textbooks, typefaces, logos and even complete visual identities.

her work has spanned remains a source of inspiration for designers to this day and can be found worldwide in many permanent collections such as the Museum of Modern Art, The German Poster museum, and Essen; Ginza Graphic Gallery, Tokyo.