Angélica Dass is a Spanish-Brazilian photographer who combines image, research and social participation to defend human rights. She is the creator of the Humanæ project, an evolving photographic series that celebrates the diversity of human color and acts as a visual manifesto against racism.
His work has been exhibited in venues such as the World Economic Forum, the United Nations, and the American Museum of Natural History. Beyond museums, their work has a strong educational component. He has developed projects with institutions around the world, with an impact on thousands of students.
In 2021 he published The Colors We Share with Aperture, along with a teaching guide that is currently is implemented in schools in the United States. She is also a renowned speaker, with lectures at TED, the Tate Modern, the University of Salamanca and the World Economic Forum.
The Colors We Share. Through portraits of people from around the world, this book celebrates human diversity and questions the rigid categories of “race” we often use to describe ourselves. The work invites readers to look, question, and rethink how we see ourselves and others.
#SAYQM – I'm a teenager, what else? Through portraits, texts and images, it presents the voice and perspective of teenagers, placing them as protagonists to explore the complexity of adolescence and their identity. The book exposes their reflections, emotions and questions about who they are and what it means to be young today.
Race is a lie
Diversity is the great value we have as a species
When verbal language is not enough to communicate, art speaks directly, clearly and loudly.