Sneha Girap (Editor)

Jean Jacques Sempé

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
French

Role
  
Cartoonist

Name
  
Jean-Jacques Sempe

Notable works
  
Le petit Nicolas

Area(s)
  
Cartoonist


Jean-Jacques Sempe by JeanJacques Sempe Pictify your social art network

Born
  
Jean-Jacques Sempe 17 August 1932 (age 91) Bordeaux, France (
1932-08-17
)

Movies
  
Little Nicholas, Nicholas on Holiday

Nominations
  
Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award

Books
  
Les Vacances du Petit N, Monsieur Lambert, Rien n\'est simple, Les Recres du petit Nicolas, Un peu de Paris

Similar People
  
Rene Goscinny, Laurent Tirard, Patrick Modiano, Bouli Lanners, Olivier Delbosc

Jean jacques semp


Jean-Jacques Sempé, usually known as Sempé ([sɑ̃pe]; born 17 August 1932), is a French cartoonist. He is known for the series of children's books he created with René Goscinny, Le petit Nicolas, and also for his poster-like illustrations, usually drawn from a distant or high viewpoint depicting detailed countrysides or cities.

Contents

Jean-Jacques Sempé Irancartoon Gallery Of Cartoon By Jean Jacques SempeFrance

Jean Jacques Sempé exhibition in Korea


Early life

Jean-Jacques Sempé 1000 ideas about Jean Jacques Semp on Pinterest Semp Le petit

Sempé was expelled from school as a young man, and then failed to pass exams for the post office, a bank and the railroad. He then found work selling tooth powder as a door-to-door salesman and also worked delivering wine by bicycle in the Gironde. After lying about his age, he joined the army in 1950, since it was “the only place that would give me a job and a bed,” he subsequently explained, and would occasionally get into trouble for drawing while he was supposed to be keeping watch during guard duty.

Jean-Jacques Sempé Illustrations of JeanJacques Semp Open Journal

After being discharged from the army, he moved to Paris and began working with René Goscinny. Sempé has spent most of his life in Paris' Saint-Germain-des-Prés district.

Artistic career

Jean-Jacques Sempé httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

His career started in France within the context of the Franco-Belgian comics industry. His "mute" watercolors or single image sketches, where the characters speak in pictures or not at all (but somehow manage to convey a rich story) slowly gained international attention. He won his first award in 1952 which is given to encourage young amateur artists to turn professional.

His work has appeared as the cover of The New Yorker magazine many times. Sempé’s full page cartoons appeared in Paris Match for many years. In the 1950s, Sempé became renowned for his creation of a character named Nicolas in his cartoons for Le Moustique, a comic book proposed by René Goscinny to Sempé. Le Petit Nicolas appeared from 1954 in Le Moustique and Sempé drew upon childhood influences and memories to illustrate the comic. In 1960, the comic Le Petit Nicolas was published in Pilote magazine. It was unusual at the time modern children's literature given that it is centered around the experience of the child, rather than an adult interpretation of the world.

Jean-Jacques Sempé JeanJacques Sempe WideWalls

In general though, Sempé rarely draws from life, and draws something every day, putting sketches aside when he gets bored with them.

Jean-Jacques Sempé 1000 images about Illustrations JeanJacques Semp on Pinterest

References

Jean-Jacques Sempé Wikipedia