Camille Longuépée, a multidisciplinary self-taught artist living in Paris, France, graduated from École Supérieure des Arts Appliqués Duperré and École Nationale Supérieure des Arts décoratifs de Paris, creates art at the edge of narrative and invisible stories. Her painting works, mixing paint, embroidery, raw materials and drawing can be read as “interior landscapes” where her instinctive and spontaneous approach tries to capture an instant of internal life, like a freeze-frame at the very moment of creation.

Nourrished by several very different experiences, such as costume designer, knitwear designer, and baker, as much as her personal life, she works by instinct, always experimenting with new materials and skills, digging in unconscious and raw emotions to bring them to light, and trying to find harmony in chaos, her healing process, like a lifetime research, constantly evolving.

Having grown up in a family of antiques and manual work lovers, where the value of objects comes from their history, she prioritizes reusing materials such as old linen for her canvas, pigments found in the attic of her family's house, and wool used by her great-grandmother, charging each work with stories in addition to her own. In her sculptures, she works with wood she grabs in the forest that she turns and sculpts, stones, shells, fruits and vegetables such as objects found in attics, building a new story from mixing them all together.

She is currently working in developing her skills in using soil and ground as a new material of explorations in sculptures and paintings.

She is represented by Gallery Wilo and Grove in Paris and works in her workshop in Montmartre.