Beauty / Beauty newsBeauty / Beauty newsWhy we need to talk about representation in the creative industriesTo celebrate Ace & Tate's new campaign, Seeing In Colour, we've invited our favourite Dazed Beauty contributors to have a frank conversation about how to improve the representation of people of colour in the creative industriesShareLink copied ✔️November 12, 2018November 12, 2018TextDazed Beauty We've all heard it, the phrase "I don't see colour". Too often, this proverbial form of colourblindness is wheeled out as an excuse for a lack of diversity. It's a basic denial of the inequalities people face because of the colour of their skin. In a new campaign for eyewear brand Ace & Tate, the creative brains behind gal-dem magazine are attempting to subvert the phrase, or at the very least, get to the bottom of what it really means. The result is Seeing In Colour, a project that explores our perception of skin colour by talking to women and nonbinary people of colour about their experiences with racism and particularly colourism. Among the four people that gal-dem interviewed for the collaboration, all from the creative industries, the feeling was unanimous: colourblindness is not an excuse for a lack of inclusion. “Saying you don’t see colour is like saying you’re some higher being who lives in a world without prejudice," said Catherine Morton-Abuah, an artist and illustrator, and one of the people gal-dem talked to. Christina Ihekwoahba by Kez Coo To celebrate the Seeing In Colour campaign, this week, Dazed Beauty are hosting a panel at Ace & Tate's's Brewer Street store in London. Under the title 'Owning The Narrative', the panel will feature a line up of important British voices from media, fashion and beauty, who have taken it upon themselves to improve representation, either by creating spaces and platforms for people of colour or by speaking out about a lack of diversity. Sharing their own experiences around representation, colourism and racism, the panel will explore how the creative industries can do better, asking: How can we take control of the conversation about diversity? How does community building empower and inspire POC voices? And how can brands push the conversation forward? Sitting on the panel is Simran Randhawa – model, writer, and former gal-dem politics editor, Umber Ghauri – a talented make-up artist specialising in QTPOC beauty, Hélène Selam Kleih - model, writer and founder of HIM + HIS, a project about men's mental health (that you can read about on Dazed Beauty here), Kuchenga Shenje – a journalist and speaker, who wrote this Dazed Beauty article on her natural hair journey as a black transgender woman, and Kemi Alemoru – Dazed Digital's staff writer and a Dazed Beauty contributor. Keep an eye on @DazedBeauty and @AceandTate's Instagram stories on Thursday night to see what went down at the event. We're also giving away four sets of tickets. Winners will be picked at random. Email dazedbeauty@dazedmedia.com with the subject line 'Dazed Beauty x Ace & Tate panel' to apply. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREMazzy Joya shares her 2026 beauty affirmations6 women on their changing relationship with pubic hairMake-up artist Saint Maretto is rewriting the codes of queer beautyIn pictures: Unpacking David Bowie’s beauty evolution through the yearsKianna Naomi shares her 2026 beauty affirmationsNo, we don’t want your robot manicuresClers Bows is the SFX artist ‘nerding out’ on orthotics and prostheticsBush domination: The 8 most read beauty articles of 2025Sirena Warren shares her 2026 beauty affirmationsTattoos, body art and raves: The 7 most viewed beauty photo stories of 2025Watch: Aquaria’s miraculous Christmas make-up tutorial2026 Horoscopes: Things are looking… kind of positive??