Ideas Evolution Design Professional Portfolio

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IED Ideas Evolution Design

J. Diego Burciaga Sosapa贸n Professional Portfolio & Resume


Content... Design Photography

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This portfolio is a compilation of work done mostly by the author, some of them have been made in collaboration with other designers, for school purposes, lucrative and artistic.



DESIG


GN

logos /catalogs /magazines /posters /typography signs /newspaper /digital cartoons /triptychs/menĂş


Logos CHE FA MAGAZINE

Location: Juárez/El Paso Completion: 2009 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

BIOGENESIS

Location: Juárez Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

fa Che

Biogénesis Energía Alternativa Iluminando el Mundo

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NON STOP TV PROGRAM

Costumer: BIP Concepts Location: El Paso & Puerto Rico Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

VEDA POSITIVE BODY

Costumer: BIP Concepts Location: El Paso Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

p o St non

veda

positive body [ 7 ]


WITHOUT BORDERS PROGRAM

Costumer: BIP Concepts Location: El Paso Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

ithout

borders

EXTRA LOGO REDISGN PROJECT

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Costumer: Grupo Modelo Location: MĂŠxico Completion: 2009 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

e tra


ESTATE & NEW JEWELRY REDISGN PROJECT

Costumer: Estate & New Jewelry Location: El Paso Completion: 2011 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

KABRISHKA CAFFÉ REDESIGN PROJECT

Estate & New j e w e l r y

E&N

Costumer: Kabrishka Caffé Location: Juárez Completion: 2011 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

kabrishka HOOKAH & CAFFÉ

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Catalogs

TYPOGRAPHIC CLASSIFICATION

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Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2009 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga


TYPOGRAPHIC CATALOG

Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2009 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

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Magazines

VECTA MAGAZINE Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2009 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga Sergio U. Vargas Veronica Ramírez Alberto Rodríguez

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CHE FA MAGAZINE

Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2009 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

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Posters

APROCANCER

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Costumer: APROCANDER Location: MĂŠxico Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga


APRODEA

Costumer: APRODEA Location: MĂŠxico Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

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IMPULSA

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Costumer: IMPULSA/ JR. Achievemet Mexico Location: MĂŠxico Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga


APROCANCER

Location: MĂŠxico Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

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DESIGN CULTURE NOW

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Location: El Paso, USA Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga


Typography

DIFONT

Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2009 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

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Signs Servicios Complentarios CARLOS MONTEMAYOR LIBRARY SIGNAGE PROJECT

Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

Audiovisual

Sala Dual

Circulación [ 20 ]


EL CHAMIZAL PUBLIC PARK SIGNAGE PROJECT

Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

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Newspaper

EL PORTAVOZ NEWSPAPER PROJECT Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga Norma Alvarez Roberto Saucedo Luis

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THE PROSPECTOR UTEP

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Location: El Paso, USA Completion: 2011 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga


prospector the

CATCH THE FASHION AROUND CAMPUS ENT. 11

The University of Texas at El Paso ¡ September 15, 2011

assayer of student opinion

MINERO MAGAZINE

KICK FOR THE CURE

The University of Texas at El Paso  October 11, 2011

Soccer gave tribute to a BREAST CANCER SURVIVOR, coachʟs Mom...

www.utepprospector.com

HISPANIC H E RI TAGE

prospector the

Look inside for the Fall 2011 edition

SPORTSÂ 9

assayer of student opinion

SEE THE WORKS OF

ANDY WARHOL Through Dec. 31

ENT. 7

www.utepprospector.com

ÂĄBASTA! Border Activist Summit for Teaching and Action

CELEBRATION

2011 Special to The Prospector / ILLUSTRATION BY DIEGO BURCIAGA

UTEP honors Hispanic culture BY ADAM MARTĂ?NEZ The Prospector UTEP will be celebrating the contributions and importance of the Hispanic culture throughout most of September and October in observation of National Hispanic Heritage Month. This year’s celebration is a memoriam to activist and scholar Frank Bonilla, civil rights leader Richard ChĂĄvez, artist Gilbert “MagĂşâ€? Lujan and journalist George Ramos. Mario Olivares, freshman business major, said he is eager to promote cultural awareness and emphasize its power in a modern context. “I hope to really motivate people of my generation to be active about the issues affecting our community,â€? Olivares said. Observation of National Hispanic Heritage Month is officially observed every year across the United States from mid-September to mid-October, by celebrating the history, cul-

Mexico celebrates 201 years of Independence

tures and contributions of citizens whose roots originate from the Spanish conquest of the Americas. What started as Hispanic Heritage Week in 1968 by President Lyndon B. Johnson was expanded to a month-long commemoration by President Ronald Reagan in 1988. This time period encompasses a number of significant dates in Latin American history, including the independence days of Mexico, Chile, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. In addition, Día de la Raza, which falls on Oct. 12, signifies the beginning of the Latina/o roots in the Americas and coincides with Christopher Columbus’ voyage to the Americas. Dennis Bixler-Marquez, director of the Chicano Studies Program, said Día de la Raza is much revered in the UTEP community.

BY CELIA AGUILAR The Prospector On Sept. 16, 1810, Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla proclaimed Mexico’s independence with a cry that has become legendary. More than 200 years later, the historical “gritoâ€? is recreated yearly to celebrate and symbolize the end of Spanish rule in Mexico. The university will honor this tradition Sept. 15 at UTEP’s Grito Ceremony: Commemoration of the Declaration of Mexican Independence. The event, taking place at 12:30 p.m. at the Union Plaza, is sponsored by the Center for Inter-American and Border Studies, Chicano Studies, Student Government Association and other student organizations. The festivity will include Mexican music of the period, guest speakers and La Banda de Guerra y Escolta (military escort band) from Ciudad JuĂĄrez. Dennis Bixler-Marquez, Chicano Studies Program director, said El Paso’s border location allows for special opportunities. “In Mexico City, there is usually a parade where all high school bands attend,â€? Bixler-Marquez said. “Unlike other cities, we have the luxury of bringing in La Banda de Guerra from a Mexican preparatory school.â€? The drum and bugle corps’ visit will also include a tour of the campus, in hopes that some of the students from Cd. JuĂĄrez will decide to attend UTEP in the future.

After the grito ceremony, a luncheon will be held at 1:15 p.m. at the Templeton Suite, third floor of Union Building East. For the coordinators involved, the event is significant because of UTEP’s demographic. Nancy Alcantar, SGA senator-at-large, said the event is culturally important. “UTEP is a community with a high Hispanic population–majority with a Mexican heritage–and for that reason we should be proud of our origins and celebrate one of the main traditions,� said Alcantar, senior interdisciplinary studies major. Nestor Duran Nungaray, SGA senator-at-large will be a speaker at the event and said that while the celebration may be seen as a time to party, it should also help students identify with their culture. “Most students have a Hispanic background so they will get to know more about their culture,� said Nungaray, junior linguistics major. “It’s a national party and students can get more into their culture while they’re celebrating.� Because of its border location, Bixler-Marquez said UTEP celebrates its bi-national community. “UTEP has a high percentage of Mexican students; 12 percent of those students are Mexican nationals,� BixlerMarquez said. “This is a binational event, very much targeting the student population.�

see GRITO on page 4

see HERITAGE on page 4

Student conference to explore U.S. policy in Mexico BY DIANA ARRIETA The Prospector Students and faculty of UTEP will gather Oct. 13 and 14, along with local activists and nationally renowned speakers, at the El Paso Natural Gas Conference Center to discuss the effects of U.S. policy in Mexico. BASTA (Border Activist Summit for Teaching and Action), sponsored by the student organizations Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlån (MEChA) and Miners without Borders, will feature a series of panel discussions, student presentations ILLUSTRATION BY DIEGO BURCIAGA

and student-activist training in topics such as immigration, drugs, guns and legislative action. “The purpose of the border summit is to educate students and expose them to experts who come from around the U.S. and Mexico to explain these issues and why students should care,� said David McKenney, sociology graduate student and president of Miners Without Borders. “They will also show students how they can become active and how they can affect legislation.� One of these issues is the violence resulting from the drug war in Mexico and its consequences worldwide.

“This war is not something that one country is dealing with, but is something that multiple countries are confronting,� said Colin Goddard, survivor of the 2007 Virginia Tech massacre and assistant director of federal legislation for the Brady campaign to prevent drug violence. According to Goddard, the U.S. policies that allow cartels to arm themselves are part of the problem. “There is no registration of firearms in this country, so that when guns leave stores there is no name associated with the gun and it can just go,� Goddard said. “There are steps we can take to make it more difficult

for these people to gain these guns, but we don’t do it because it interferes with the profits gained from those in the business of selling guns in the U.S.� Adam Isaacson, director of the Regional Security Policy Program at the Washington Office on Latin America, said the drug war has spread along the

see BASTA on page 5 see BASTA on page 5

Campus

UTEP brings awareness to issues disabled students face BY CHRISTIAN GUERRERO The Prospector Miner Diamonds, a campus-based social/service group for students with and without disabilities, is working to shed light on the challenges many disabled students have overcome and to educate the UTEP community on issues of disability. The group, along with the Disabled Student Services Office, is hosting Disability Awareness Week Oct. 10-14. Nichole Coleman, senior psychology major and president of Miner Diamonds, said she wants to bring awareness to everyone about what being disabled really means. “My purpose for this event is to show the UTEP community that despite the fact that we are physically disabled, we’re still active in different

ways,� Coleman said. “We still play sports, but modified versions of it.� Manelic Alcala, administrative assistant at Disabled Student Services Office, said this year’s events feature students discussing their own experiences and the hurdles they have overcome. Highlights of the week include two major motion pictures, “The King’s Speech� and “My Left Foot,� which focuses on people dealing with disabilities, and a wheelchair hockey game, hosted by the Miner Diamonds at the Student Recreation Center. “My plan is for the Miner Diamonds and for ADD (Appreciation of Diverse Disposition) members to play for the first half hour and then open it for everyone who wants to participate,� Coleman said. Davi Kallman, communication graduate student and president of the ADD organization, said that her

see AWARENESS on page 6

VERONICA CHAPARRO / THE PROSPECTOR

Mauricio Barba, freshman electrical engineering major, takes part in training for sensitivity during Disability Awareness Week Oct. 10 at the Union Building East.

Â

Â?Â? Â?Â? Â?Â? Â?Â?Â? ­ €

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Digital Cartoon

TALU & HEARTIE Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

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Triptychs

Conocer BREAST CANCER es prevenir

Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2010 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

Secretaria de Salud www. salud.gob.mx dudas@salud.gob.mx 19 de Octubre Dia Internacional del Cancer de mama

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Menú

KABRISHKA CAFFÉ Location: Juárez, México Completion: 2011 Designer/s: Diego Burciaga

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PHOTOGR


RAPHY landscapes/wildlife/people/architecture












































IED Ideas Evolution Design

Contact Phone: (915) 231.0104 E-mail: ideasevolution@live.com


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