Kim Mupangilaï
I’m able to share and shape my unique narrative with the intention of offering a feeling of community, new perspective, and insight with the hope to encourage fresh discourse and conversation.
Kim Mupangilaï is a Belgium-born, New York-based Interior Architect and Designer. Inspired by her own heritage and roots, Kim’s work is reflective of merging cultures. She aims to bring a unique perspective and insight that encourages fresh discourse within the design world and beyond.
The exhibition“HUE/AM/I - HUE/I/AM”presents Kim Mupangilaï’s first furniture collection. The term Hue in the exhibition's title is a reference to skin tone, a nod to Mupangilaï’s family background. Born to a Belgian mother and Congolese father, Mupangilaï was raised in Europe, losing contact with her African heritage. With her furniture collection, Kasaï, she rediscovers her cross-cultural identity and hopes to provoke viewers’exploration of their own lineages.
The collection consists of seven furniture forms made from natural materials – teak, stone, rattan, and banana fibre – all symbolic of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Rattan is traditionally found in baskets, rugs, and textiles, while banana fibre is a reference to the banana leaves commonly used for cooking, serving, and food preservation. The teak and stone speak to the rich natural resources of the country. Hand-working these materials into domestic furnishings with exaggerated curves, Mupangilaï establishes her sensuous and playful visual language. Two terms that appear in the titles of each piece are MSWASI, meaning woman, and BINA, meaning dance. Thus, ideas of femininity, place, history, and culture, are reverently explored by the designer. The resulting collection is at once sumptuous and introspective.
- Art: Kim Mupangilaï
- Photos: Luis Corzo Gabriel Flores