'Amor e Cia' for Vogue Portugal December 2023 Explores Skin Color Beauty

'Amor e Cia' for Vogue Portugal December 2023 Explores Skin Color Beauty Art of Living

Photographer Catharina Pavitschitz [IG] adds poetic beauty to the pages of Vogue Portugal’s [IG] December 2023 ‘Love and Hope’ issue with ‘Amor e Cia’ [Love and Company].

Models include Aria [Shine], Maansi Mehta, Marlo Hsieh and Nikita Nightingale, styled by Joanne M Kennedy./ Makeup and hair by Tom Fraser

Vogue Portugal has an exemplary history in dealing with deeply-challenging issues of skin color, as it impacts racial identity and global culture images.

The History of Skin Color

AOC has studied the topic of skin color since 2001, becoming deeply-focused on it since Charlottesville 2017, the 2016 election of Donald Trump as president of America, and the murder of George Floyd in 2020. Anne’s involvement in social justice movements has defined much of her life and has always been a quiet but steady focus on Anne of Carversville.

The research on exactly when a person’s skin color became a racial demarcation around human value is clear and not disputed by any facts we know about. Our AI assistant Lulu, reviewed the three AI research platforms we pay for this morning, and AOC’s position remains unchallenged.

In many societies, including ancient civilizations in Asia, Africa, and the Americas, skin color was not initially a defining factor for racial identity. Instead, factors such as language, culture, and geographical origin played a more important role in distinguishing between different groups of people.