Claudia Andujar


Claudia Andujar is a Swiss-born Brazilian photographer and activist.

Life

The daughter of a Hungarian Jewish father and a Swiss mother, she was born Claudine Haas in Neuchâtel and grew up in Romania and Hungary. She fled to Austria with her mother during World War II; her father and his family died at the Dachau concentration camp. She went on to study humanities at Hunter College in New York City. There she met a Spanish refugee Julio Andujar, whom she married in 1949 and whose last name she still maintains. Andujar moved to Brazil in 1956 to stay with her mother, Germaine Guye Haas.
A project on the Karajá people in central Brazil led her to a career in photojournalism. Her work has appeared in various magazines, including Life, Look, Fortune, Aperture, Realidade and Claudia.
She has documented the culture of the Yanomami over the years, including a book Yanomami: The House, The Forest, The Invisible published in 1998. The Yanomami had had little contact with the outside world. When a highway project through their territory led to a disastrous outbreak of measles, she suspended her photographic work to help bring medical aid to the Yanomami. During the 1980s, an influx of illegal gold miners into this region led to more health problems, including an outbreak of malaria and mercury poisoning. Twenty per cent of the Yanomami population died as a result. Andujar played an important role in establishing the Commission for the Creation of the Yanomami Park which led to the Brazilian government establishing a 96,000 km2 protected area for use by the Yanomami.
Her work was supported by Guggenheim Fellowships in 1971 and 1977.
Andujar's photographs are included in the collections of various museums including the Museum of Modern Art in New York City and the Eastman House in Rochester, New York. A gallery of the Inhotim museum in Brumadinho was built to display her work.
Andujar received a Cultural Freedom Prize in 2000 for her work in portraying and aiding the Yanomani people. In 2008, she was named to the Brazilian Ordem do Mérito Cultural. In 2018, she received a Goethe Medal for her groundbreaking work with the Yanomami.

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