How old are you? Where do you currently live and work?
I am 41 years old, I live in Fortaleza, in the state of Ceará, “I am the cream of the trash, I am the luxury of the village, I am from Ceará,” borrowing the verses of Ednardo (a composer from Ceará). My work as an art-educator, inscribed by photography, has inhabited non-formal education spaces, namely: image ateliers with atypical children from Iprede (Instituto da Primeira Infância) – Vincular Project; in addition to teaching classes/workshops in public heritage spaces of art and education in Ceará.
Tell us about your journey in photography. When did you start photographing and why? What role does photography play in your life?
‘Say cheese!’ became a state of being since my childhood, initiated by playful experimentation. I got my first camera when I was 12 years old. It was my favorite toy, a basic Yashica analog. For financial reasons, given the imperatives of capitalism, it took me a long time to own a digital camera. In 2012, I took my first photography course, the Basic Course at Casa Amarela, at the Federal University of Ceará (UFC), which opened my lenses to the optical variations of this art as a social, human, political language, strengthening my passion. After this first course, capturing knowledge related to photography made me wander through auto-, hetero- and eco-formative processes.
The knowledge of how to teach also involved me as a core, related to family flashes, leading me to the Bachelor’s degree in Visual Arts at the Federal Institute of Ceará (IFCE), producing a reading of photography with transgressive education. From this perspective, and imbued with the markers of gender and territory, I joined the Sol para Mulheres group, a collective of female photographers from Ceará. The singular-plural territory of photography as a reading of the world calls me to be more, a Freirean concept moving within me, to encode and decode through images the existences and resistances.