Member of International Graphic Design Union (AGI)
Professor of Graphic Design, Kassel Comprehensive College
First-class professor and vice president of Erruhe National University of Design.
Honorary Professor of Jiangnan University
Commissioned project of video portfolio
Gunter Gunter Rambaugh (1938) was born in a small town named Noyce Tritz in Fort markland.
1958 ~ 1963 (age 20 ~ 25) studied painting and practical art at Kassel Institute of Plastic Arts.
1960 Gunter Rambow, 22, set up his own graphic photography studio in Frankfurt.
Gunter Rambow (Germany) Gunter Rambow Gunter Rambow (Germany) Gunter Rambow 1963 (25 years old) graduated from Kassel Academy of Fine Arts.
1964 ~ 1973 set up personal design offices in Stuttgart and Frankfurt.
From 65438 to 0974, he was a member of the International Graphic Design Union (AGI). In the same year, 36-year-old Lamborghini was hired as a professor of graphic design by Kassel Comprehensive College.
1987 (49 years old) served as Kassel professor of visual communication.
1993 (55 years old) has been a first-class professor and vice president of Karlsruhe National University of Design.
1997 (59 years old) used to be honorary professor of Jiangnan University and honorary director of the International Advertising Design Research Center.
Gunter Rambow is known as "German visual poet", together with Akio Toyoda of Japan and Seymour Chwast of the United States, he is also known as "the three largest graphic designers in the world". During his 30-year career, Lamborghini designed thousands of posters. His posters have won many awards in international art exhibitions and biennials, and have been collected by museums, universities and cultural institutions in many countries. Ramburg tried to express his artistic thought, ideology and morphological position through design, and created poetic design on the basis of visual communication function, which was highly personalized and liberalized. He emphasized self-awareness and understanding of life, pursued visual impact in visual effect, and emphasized the breakthrough of plane effect.