Born to a Barcelona family with strong roots in Tiana, she studied at
La Llotja de Barcelona with Joan Llaverias and Antoni Utrillo who helped Anglada get her first exposure in the
Sala Parés and in the weekly magazine
¡Cu-Cut!, which published her drawings. Later, and for a short period, would enter the academy Francesc d' A. Galí, where she met
Joan Miró and
Cristōfol Ricard, with the latter establishing close friendships both personally and artistically At the end of
World War I Anglada traveled to
Paris thanks to a
French Government scholarship, collaborating with several publishing companies there, where she corresponded with
Francesc Macià or
Josep Clarà. Infused with democratic values and the Catalanist cause, she organized a request of
amnesty for the accused participants in the Garraf Plot against the King
Alfonso XIII of Spain. During the
Spanish Civil War, she joined the
UGT and collaborated in the
Commissariat of propaganda, with the latter published in the Spanish Civil War (1937) that perhaps its most iconic and recognized
Tale: The smallest of all. Once the war ended, she settled permanently in Tiana, a town in the Maresme region near Barcelona, in the farm family resort where she died on 12 September 1984. ==Artistic works==