jean-jacques sempé: 1932 – 2022

 

The beloved French artist Jean-Jacques Sempé has died this Thursday at age 89. Born in Bordeaux in 1932, he was known widely for creating over 100 covers for the New Yorker along with a number of children’s book illustrations. His death was announced to the Agence France-Presse by his wife, Martine Gossieaux Sempé. According to Sempé’s biographer Marc Lecarpentier, he died at a holiday home while away from his residence in Paris. He comments: ‘Jean-Jacques Sempé died peacefully on Thursday night … in his summer home, surrounded by his wife and close friends.‘ The artist died just a few days before his 90th birthday which falls on August 17th.

french illustrator jean-jacques sempé dies at 89portrait of the artist in his studio

 

 

the legacy of the artist

 

While recognized in the United States most for his whimsical New Yorker covers — of which he created more than any other artist — he was perhaps most famous for illustrating the children’s book series Le Petit Nicolas by René Goscinny. The saga told of a schoolboy in a nostalgic and idealistic depiction of 1950s France, and was one of the most successful book series of its time. While the series comprised five books, the first in 1959, Sempé had collectively produced and collaborated on over thirty books, largely children’s stories.

 

The artist had described himself as ‘an eternal optimist,’ commonly captioning his gentle illustrations with humorous one-liners of social commentary. His collaborations with the New Yorker began in 1978, depicting common people, many times within a vast landscape or monumental urban backdrop rendered in delicate line drawings and soft washes of color. 

french illustrator jean-jacques sempé dies at 89two covers of The New Yorker, 1983 and 1997

 

french illustrator jean-jacques sempé dies at 89cover of The New Yorker, 1986

french illustrator jean-jacques sempé dies at 89cover of The New Yorker, 1988

french illustrator jean-jacques sempé dies at 89Le Petit Nicolas (Little Nick),

The first story appeared on March 29, 1959 in the regional newspaper ‘Sud-Ouest Dimanche’

 

Within six years, more than 200 episodes were published about Le Petit Nicolas, his friends Otto, Adalbert and Franz. They later appeared as books and were translated into 30 languages. 15 million copies have been sold in 45 countries, they have also been filmed and adapted as an animated series. Hardly any child in France does not know the stories of little Nick and his world of lovingly ironic strokes. 

 

french illustrator jean-jacques sempé dies at 89Jean-Jacques Sempé, rien n’est simple, 1960