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Camilla Martini

Venice, Italy
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About Camilla
I am a photojournalist and documentarian. I worked with Radio Popolare Roma, VICE, Munchies, Noisey, Motherboard and Il Manifesto, as a journalist, radio speaker and photographer. 
I also directed many documentary shorts, music videos, videodance.

I am Italian, I speak English and Spanish fluently and I have a good knowledge of French.
Languages
English Spanish Italian
Services
Video Package (Web / Broadcast) Vox Pop Documentaries
+7
Skills
Politics Current Affairs Science & Environment
+10
Portfolio

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

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AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

AFTER THE TSUNAMI ( TOHOKU, JAPAN, 2016 ) 5 years after the tsunami that devastated the coast s of northern Japan, most of Tohoku was still recovering and very underpopulated. After the disaster, in 2011, the government decided to build 405 km of seawalls along the coast and after five years only 22% was ready. Local Ngos argue that the seawall, much lower in height than the actual 11/3 tsunami wave, is a useless waste of public money.

photo

30 YEARS OLD: CHAPTER I (VENICE, 2017-ONGOING) This is a long term project that explores where Italians in their thirties live. Given the unemployment rate and low salaries offered to young professionals, affording a place to live can be really hard. I look for the expected and unexpected solutions young Italians find for themselves. Where do they live once society tells them they are supposed to be able to care for themselves, but fail to give opportunities? The first chapter focuses on squat houses in Venice.

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30 YEARS OLD: CHAPTER I (VENICE, 2017-ONGOING) This is a long term project that explores where Italians in their thirties live. Given the unemployment rate and low salaries offered to young professionals, affording a place to live can be really hard. I look for the expected and unexpected solutions young Italians find for themselves. Where do they live once society tells them they are supposed to be able to care for themselves, but fail to give opportunities? The first chapter focuses on squat houses in Venice.

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30 YEARS OLD: CHAPTER I (VENICE, 2017-ONGOING) This is a long term project that explores where Italians in their thirties live. Given the unemployment rate and low salaries offered to young professionals, affording a place to live can be really hard. I look for the expected and unexpected solutions young Italians find for themselves. Where do they live once society tells them they are supposed to be able to care for themselves, but fail to give opportunities? The first chapter focuses on squat houses in Venice.

photo

30 YEARS OLD: CHAPTER I (VENICE, 2017-ONGOING) This is a long term project that explores where Italians in their thirties live. Given the unemployment rate and low salaries offered to young professionals, affording a place to live can be really hard. I look for the expected and unexpected solutions young Italians find for themselves. Where do they live once society tells them they are supposed to be able to care for themselves, but fail to give opportunities? The first chapter focuses on squat houses in Venice.

photo

30 YEARS OLD: CHAPTER I (VENICE, 2017-ONGOING) This is a long term project that explores where Italians in their thirties live. Given the unemployment rate and low salaries offered to young professionals, affording a place to live can be really hard. I look for the expected and unexpected solutions young Italians find for themselves. Where do they live once society tells them they are supposed to be able to care for themselves, but fail to give opportunities? The first chapter focuses on squat houses in Venice.

photo

30 YEARS OLD: CHAPTER I (VENICE, 2017-ONGOING) This is a long term project that explores where Italians in their thirties live. Given the unemployment rate and low salaries offered to young professionals, affording a place to live can be really hard. I look for the expected and unexpected solutions young Italians find for themselves. Where do they live once society tells them they are supposed to be able to care for themselves, but fail to give opportunities? The first chapter focuses on squat houses in Venice.

photo

30 YEARS OLD: CHAPTER I (VENICE, 2017-ONGOING) This is a long term project that explores where Italians in their thirties live. Given the unemployment rate and low salaries offered to young professionals, affording a place to live can be really hard. I look for the expected and unexpected solutions young Italians find for themselves. Where do they live once society tells them they are supposed to be able to care for themselves, but fail to give opportunities? The first chapter focuses on squat houses in Venice.

photo

30 YEARS OLD: CHAPTER I (VENICE, 2017-ONGOING) This is a long term project that explores where Italians in their thirties live. Given the unemployment rate and low salaries offered to young professionals, affording a place to live can be really hard. I look for the expected and unexpected solutions young Italians find for themselves. Where do they live once society tells them they are supposed to be able to care for themselves, but fail to give opportunities? The first chapter focuses on squat houses in Venice.

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Andrigo-Aliprandi perform at Spazio Aereo in January 2017.

The City's Pitch is a sonic-urban-action executed by a chorus of 12 people "singing" 5 different scores. It involves all those graphical and symbolical codes carved, glued, written on the surface of the urban space (advertisements, posters, street numbers, street names, graffiti etc.). The City's Pitch is part of the research process that Johann Merrich is dedicating since 2015 to the relationship between sound, word and meaning. Premiere: Campiello Mosca, Venice 17/06/2016 With: Sophia Barbon, Eliana Boschiero, Marianna Andrigo, Andrea D'Arsiè, Alessia De Francesco, Elisa Frasson, Micaela Leonardi, Ilaria Pasqualetto, Margherita Pirotto, Anna Quintelli, Stefania Rossa, Cristiana Rolla, Francesca Rolla, Alessandra Trevisan, Micol Zanellato.

One of the first cricket clubs in central Italy.

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