Posters
Poster of the
1026th Foire de Saint-Ours
The image was created by Davide Bongiovanni’s Studio Arsenale, with illustrations by Annie Roveyaz. The idea was born from the memory of the veillà d’antan, the long winter evenings when people gathered to spend time together-some embroidering, some sculpting, some singing-and ideally takes the visitor on a journey through time, up to the Foire of today.
The colors also follow this path: from the darkness that is never gloomy, but filled with joy, warmth, and sharing, to the light of day, a symbol of the celebration that illuminates the heart of Aosta every year.
Designed to be observed carefully, the manifesto is full of details and little stories to discover. Through the stroke and colors, it restores the most authentic essence of the Foire de Saint-Ours: a living and participated event, made of sounds, voices and faces, of craftsmanship and flavors, of objects and colors.
The colors also follow this path: from the darkness that is never gloomy, but filled with joy, warmth, and sharing, to the light of day, a symbol of the celebration that illuminates the heart of Aosta every year.
Designed to be observed carefully, the manifesto is full of details and little stories to discover. Through the stroke and colors, it restores the most authentic essence of the Foire de Saint-Ours: a living and participated event, made of sounds, voices and faces, of craftsmanship and flavors, of objects and colors.
Poster of the
Foire de Saint-Ours de Donnas 2026
While the Aosta poster invites a journey from the old veillas to the days of the Fair, the Donnas poster opens its doors to the vibrant air of the old town.
Here, the scene arises not from darkness, but from the clear light of day, which reveals stone walls, centuries-old arches, and familiar views: it is the town that becomes a living framework for craftsmanship.
The same, but different, with “elements to be discovered” that differ from that of Aosta.
The colors open, lighten, become more direct, just like the atmosphere of the Foire di Donnas, shorter, but intense and collected.
