Inga Sempé

Inga Sempé (born 1968) is a French designer and constructor of technical items,[1] who designs furniture, lamps and other design objects for manufacturers like Ligne Roset, Alessi und Baccarat. She was awarded the Red Dot Design Award in 2007.

Life

Inga Sempé was born in 1968 as daughter of Mette Ivers, a Danish graphic artist and painter and the well-known French graphic artist Jean-Jacques Sempé. She studied at the Ecole Nationale Superieure de Création Industrielle (ENSCI) in Paris and passed her final exams there in 1993. She is married to the designer Ronan Bouroullec and has two children.[2] Inga Sempé lives and works in Paris.

Career

In 1994 she designed for the Australian designer Marc Newson, in 1997–1999 for the French designer Andrée Putman. From 2000 she worked for the Italian design companies Cappellini and Edra and at the same time founded her own company in Paris. She aims for sustainable, simple, but not minimalist objects.

For her, function is important, and the material has to support it. "Sempé's lamps can be extended like accordions, the size of her suitcase prototype for the manufacturer Via, which can replace any hotel wardrobe, can be changed."[3] For Italian, French and Scandinavian design companies she projects furniture and pictures as well as design objects, such as for Alessi, Ligne Roset, Baccarat, Tectona, LucePlan, Moustache and the American manufacturer Artecnica.

Works

Many of her lamps have lampshades which appear like fans and allow a variety of light and shade impressions. The pendant luminaire Plissé produced by Luceplan can be unfolded like an accordion, as the material is pleated. In 2009 the lamp manufacturer Moustache launched the series of Vapeur pendants and table lamps with their characteristic lampshades made out of densely folded Tyvek-fleece. This thin, papery material is either white or printed with very thin lines in delicate colours.

The Swedish lamp manufacturer Wästberg offers a clip lamp by Inga Sempé which can also stand on the table or hang from the wall.

Expositions

In 2003 the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris consecrated an exposition to Inga Sempé.[4]

Awards

In 2000/2001 she got a scholarship for the Villa Medici, an institution of the Académie de France à Rome. In 2003 she received the 8000-Euro-Major Design Award of the City of Paris,[5] in 2007 the Red Dot Design Award for her upholstered furniture Moël.[6] In 2012 she was guest of honor of the Stockholm furniture fair Stockholm Furniture Fair & Northern Light Fair.[7]

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gollark: For all the "instability" of Arch, it doesn't randomly do that.
gollark: Is anything below `ghc` in the stack implementation details to you?
gollark: The machine code for them is excessively complex too, now, but I suppose you mostly write Haskell and whatnot which is then compiled to that.
gollark: They have ridiculously complex manufacturing processes because the transistors are on the scale of a few hundred atoms, it's crazy.

References

Notes

  1. Pia Volk: Die Herrin der Dinge., in: Süddeutsche Zeitung Magazin, issue 39, 25 September 2015, p. 33.
  2. Fèvre, Anne-Marie (7 September 2012). "Inga Sempé. Design bien trempé". Libération Next. Retrieved 29 December 2017.
  3. Pia Volk: Die Herrin der Dinge., in: Süddeutsche Zeitung Magazin, Issue 39, 25 September 2015, p. 37.
  4. Note on the Exposition, retrieved 15 October 2015.
  5. Anne-Marie Fèvre: Inga Sempé. Design bien trempé., Libération, 7 September 2012, retrieved 15 October 2015.
  6. Die besten Designer des red dot design award 2007 im Interview: Inga Sempé., Red Dot Online, retrieved 15 October 2015.
  7. Andrea Eschbach: Designerin Inga Sempé. Beobachterin des Alltags., Neue Zürcher Zeitung, 3 May 2013, retrieved 15 October 2015.
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