Somos de la tierra
Film + photo docuseries about land access for Black, Brown and Indigenous people in South Florida
Marginalized and disenfranchised communities have historically faced systemic challenges when it comes to accessing recreation.
This series features Black, Brown and Indigenous land stewards in South Florida. Together we’re exploring themes around access to recreation and beliefs about connecting with land.

Reckoning with a racist eco history.
The racial reckoning of 2020 inspired a wave of diversity and inclusion dialogue in the mainstream outdoor industry. How can they make the outdoor space a place of belonging without acknowledging the racist eco history that influences design and still impacts us today?
-
For this series we’re exploring access as it relates to:
Safety
Inclusion
Transportation
Mobility
Affordability
Proximity
Accountability
Who is responsible for addressing the systemic challenges and micro-aggressions Black and Brown people face outdoors?
-
Mainstream outdoor media campaigns are inherently exclusionary, homogenous, elitist and promote ideas that are misused to police Black and Brown bodies in nature. The privatization of green spaces in gentrified neighborhoods, generates more policing of Black and Brown people in the outdoors.
This series is collects stories and perspectives about what it means to be Black or Brown in the outdoors.
-
This project features key land stewards as they share practices that help bring them back to a place of interconnectedness. Together we’re imagining emergent futures. What does it look like when we are able to access & connect with land without being excluded, policed and oppressed?



