Martina Amati

Martina Amati (born 14 May 1969) is an Italian BAFTA[1] winning filmmaker and artist. Her work is known for underwater and gravity defying scenes.

Martina Amati
Born(1969-05-14)14 May 1969
Milan, Italy
OccupationFilm director, screenwriter, artist
Spouse(s)Charles Steel

Early years

Amati studied at the Brera Academy in Milan. Upon graduation her work was selected for the first Salon Primo di Brera. Following this, curator Andrea Lissoni invited her to exhibit her video Little Swimming Woman at 'Traslochi', it:Palazzo dell'Arengario, Milan. At this time, after an offer from MTV Europe, She moved to London, to take the position as On Air Producer.

Work

After making many MTV Title Sequences and Promos and working in a team that designed MTV Italy, Amati returned to create her own work, with Altitude, a travel documentary following actor Joseph Fiennes across Tibet, presented at the Hay Festival of Literature & Arts, Wales. She subsequently made two short documentaries commissioned by Discovery Channel, Liquidman, screened at Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival[2] and Tapeman.

In 2008 Amati moved into drama with three short films that premiered in competition at the Sundance Film Festival, BFI London Film Festival and Berlinale film festivals. With her short dramas Amati won a BAFTA (I Do Air[3][4]), a BAFTA Los Angeles Certificate of Excellence (A' Mare), and received another BAFTA nomination in 2012 for Chalk, which also won the BIFA alongside other International Awards. Her dramatic work features non-professional actors and involved a process of workshopping to develop the scripts.

In 2012 Amati was awarded a Wellcome Trust Arts Award [5] to make Under, a multiple screen installation entirely filmed and performed underwater in one breath of air. Under debuted at Ambika P3, London 2015.[6]

Personal life

Amati grew up in Italy. She has a passion for freediving.

Documentaries

  • 2005 Altitude (Director, Screenwriter, Cinematographer)
  • 2013 Liquidman (Director, Screenwriter)
  • 2015 Tapeman (Director, Screenwriter, Cinematographer)

Short dramas

  • 2008 A'Mare (Director, Screenwriter)
  • 2009 I Do Air (Director, Screenwriter)
  • 2011 Chalk (Director, Screenwriter)

Art videos

  • 1993 I'll Be Back In One Hour (Performer, Director, Screenwriter)
  • 1996 Little Swimming Woman (Drawings, Director)
  • 2011 Submission (Director, Screenwriter)
  • 2013 Je T'Ecoute (Director, Screenwriter)
  • 2015 Under (Performer, Director, Screenwriter)

Awards and nominations

Awards and nominations
Year Award Category Title Result
2008 Unicef Award Unicef Award A'Mare Won
2009 BAFTA Los Angeles Certificate of Excellence A'Mare Won
2010 BAFTA Best Short Film I Do Air Won
2011 British Independent Film Awards Best British Short Film Chalk Won
2012 BAFTA Best Short Film Chalk Nominated
gollark: LocalStorage and IndexedDB would be replaced with WebSQL or something, which is just an interface to SQLite.
gollark: It'll send your cookies with it and stuff, so if you could see the response it would be a horrible security problem.
gollark: Yes. The situation now is that browsers will happily send requests from one origin to another, but only if it's a GET or POST request, not allow custom headers with it, and, critically, do bizarre insane stuff to avoid letting code see the *response*.
gollark: Oh, and unify ServiceWorker and WebWorker and SharedWorker and whatever into some sort of nicer "background task" API.
gollark: API coherency: drop stuff like XMLHttpRequest which is obsoleted by cleaner things like `fetch`, actually have a module system and don't just randomly scatter objects and functions in the global scope, don't have a weird mix of callbacks, events and promises everywhere.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.