Céline Semaan Vernon

Céline Semaan-Vernon is a Lebanese-Canadian designer, writer, and activist. She is the founder of Slow Factory Foundation, a 501c3 public service organization.[1] She is on the Council of Progressive International,[2] became a Director's Fellow of MIT Media Lab in 2016,[3] and served on the Board of Directors of AIGA NY, a nonprofit design organization.[4]

Céline Semaan-Vernon
Born
Céline Semaan

1982 (age 4041)
Beirut, Lebanon
NationalityCanadian, Lebanese
Occupation(s)Fashion designer and writer
Known forFashion activism
MIT Media Lab Director’s Fellow
United Nations
Websitehttps://celinecelines.com/

Career

Semaan began her career as a designer and community organizer; she worked as a user-experience designer for HUGE Inc., General Assembly, and Condé Nast.[3] Semaan works in the open knowledge and access to information movement, working with Creative Commons to bring the open licensing to Montreal, Lebanon and Qatar. Founding Slow Factory in 2012 while living in Montreal quickly brought her to New York in 2013 to continue to expand the intersection of environmental sustainability, social good, and fashion.

As an artist and designer her work has been featured in the Museum of Modern Art and Cooper Hewitt[5] in New York, the de Young Museum in San Francisco.

Semaan is a recognized expert in the space of environmental and social justice.[6] She coined the term fashion activism, and has also worked extensively to raise awareness of other issues and causes around social and environmental justice by broadening her platform, such as bringing the word ”decolonize” to the pages of popular fashion magazines[7]

She is known for her activism in social justice causes especially around refugees,[8] cultural appropriation,[9][10] and Arab identity,[11] her advocacy for sustainable practices in fashion,[12] and her work as a digital and product designer.

References

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