Cindy Landolt is Switzerland’s most famous Fitness Athlete and Personal Trainer, she is the owner of The Centurion Club, Europes most exclusive fitness studio, where she trains professional International sports personalities as well as Hollywood actors, singers, politicians and Global Corporation CEOs.
The unique membership policy is strictly vetted by the approval of other clients and ensures the highest attention is paid to each member and their results.
Cindy often appears in Television and Press features, but is very selective regarding interviews and questions about her personal life, this has only created more intrigue and a greater following, leading to her being chosen as one of the most influential people in Zurich by Whos Who Magazine.
As a Personal Trainer, Cindy has an enviable success rate, as well as a client list that sets her apart from most in the industry. She credits this to a lifetime of studying sports, fitness, rehabilitation and nutrition, where she gained a deep knowledge and understanding of all aspects of physical improvement, allowing her to specialize as a Fitness Trainer. But Cindy is keen to point out, that the most important word in Personal trainer, is “Personal”, and that it is these relationships and understandings of the subtle nuances of each and every client that ensure the success of her trainees.
Beyond her work with clients, Cindy also publishes a vast array of free E-Books on the subjects of Training and Nutrition, as well as creating the World’s First ‘Live Stream’ of her training via her website, broadcasting simultaneously through 6 HD cameras to over 100,000 viewers, long before any social media platforms were offering such capability.
179.7 CM
82.5 KG
Swiss
100kg bench press for 8 reps
136.5kg squat for 13 reps
148kg trap bar deadlift for 16 reps
Squat with Watson Safety Squat Bar
Born and raised in Uruguay, Martin Ansin is a digital illustrator who has worked with Entertainment Weekly, Fortune Magazine, Hasbro, Nike, Penguin Books, The Washington Post, Playboy, Rolling Stone Magazine and The New Yorker – just to name a few. Ansin’s designs are purely conceived on his computer, but he uses tools like any other craftsman. The painter creates the world in oils, Ansin creates his world in pixels. There is no attempt at mimicry, no filter to act as the texture of paper or hand-felt grit. Ansin pushes the medium and in doing so surprises the viewer, showing us the true depth of what software and an inspired mind can bring us.