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EEDE, NetherlandsXeikon is sad to announce the death of its founder Lucien De Schamphelaere on Jan. 20. He was 85.

After a 40 year career with Agfa-Gevaert, where he was instrumental in forming the company’s electronic imaging system department, Lucien wanted a new challenge. So, in August 1988 he established the limited liability company, Ellith NV, which started with just five employees. That name would soon be changed into Xeikon NV, the composition of the Greek words “xeros” (dry) and “eikon” (image).

Five years later, at Ipex 1993, the company unveiled its prototype of the DCP-1. The digital color press provided the basis for the company’s full scale product line. In November 1994, the company introduced its Variable Data System, which allowed single pass personalizing of individual pages.
Xeikon went public in March 1996 by listing on the NASDAQ stock exchange. It was only the second Flemish company to do so. Less than six months later it launched the Xeikon DCP/32D digital color press. The introduction of the Xeikon second generation helped net profits to reach more than $1.8 million.

In 1997, Xeikon introduced the DCP/50D, the first digital color press capable of printing B2. Now with 340 employees, the company also moved to new, larger premises in Antwerp.

1998 saw the sale of its 1,000th digital color press and a fifth color unit was introduced to its presses, as well as an opaque white toner. The same year, Lucien went on to found Triakon NV, a digital printing company specializing in point of sale.

Xeikon went on to be acquired by Flint Group on 2015. It also launched the Xeikon CX3 digital label press and the Xeikon 9800 dry toner digital color press. A year later, in introduced Trillium One to take digital print production to a new level of quality and productivity.

Wim Maes, Xeikon CEO comments: “We were so saddened to hear the news of Lucien’s death. He had an amazing passion for digital printing and unstoppable drive that lead him to achieve such an incredible amount in his lifetime. His dedication and pioneering approach remains a key cornerstone of Xeikon today.”

About Lucien De Schamphelaere

Lucien was born on April 3, 1931 in Gijzenzele, Belgium. He graduated in 1952 as an engineer in electronics and started working that same year for the N.V. Gevaert Photo-Products physics lab. In 1958, he transferred to instrumentation, a young department that had been created to automate machines and workflows at Gevaert. The department changed a lot during the 14 years Lucien spent at its head. It grew from a small group of employees to a department of about 100 employees, and at the beginning of the seventies, Agfa-Gevaert was far ahead in automation.

In the seventies, De Schamphelaere became more and more convinced that traditional photochemistry would irreversibly be replaced by electronic imaging, and he quietly started working on an electronical printing machine with a group of close associates. In 1979, he started a new department, “electronical imaging systems,” with the support of former company executives André Leysen and Etienne De Wolf. Only three years later, the small team could present the P400, its first digital black and white printing press, at the Hannover trade show.

In 1988, Lucien was awarded the Otto-Bayer Medal, the first in a series of international prizes he would receive over the years for his contribution to digital imaging.

The continuous search for new challenges was a constant in his career. “Once a project gets rolling, I tend to lose interest. I’m happiest at the start of it, when I can develop what doesn’t yet exist,” he said in an interview with newspaper De Tijd.

From 1986, as president of Agfa’s Venture Capital Fund, he was given the time to look for the most promising applications in digital imaging. By 1988, he had a blueprint ready for what would later become “Xeikon.”

For this new project, a limited liability company named “Ellith NV” was established in 1988. That name was shortly after changed into “Xeikon NV,” the composition of the Greek words “xeros” (dry) and “eikon” (image). Agfa took a minority participation in this company; the rest of the equity was brought in by six additional investors.

By the summer of 1993, the time was ripe and Xeikon introduced the DCP-1, a digital color printing press that could print without an ink sheet. The renowned magazine Seybold called it a “new standard for the color printing market. The impact of the DCP-1 on color printing is probably as big as the impact Apple LaserWriter had on black and white printing.”

In 1996, Xeikon got listed on the NASDAQ Stock Market, it was the second Belgian company to ever take such a step. At the age of 67, Lucien retired from his position as CEO and in 1998, he left the presidency of Xeikon.

In 1999, Lucien established Triakon, a printing center used to further develop digital color printing. All these years, he was a member of the Boards of Directors of Imec, Option, Melexis, Materialise and Hydrogen Systems.

Lucien received multiple distinctions for his pioneering work in the graphics industry, including the GATF-award, the IS&T Award and the prestigious Cary Award (1997).

Over his whole career, he remained very socially engaged, he was involved in his local parish and supported charities such as the “Rijsactie” to help local missionaries.