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Andrea Dalla Costa | |
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Born | 1974 (age 49–50) Udine, Italy |
Occupation(s) | Artist, Art Director, Film maker, Illustrator |
Years active | 1992–present |
Andrea Dalla Costa (born, 1974) is an Italian visual artist, art director and film maker.
Follow his artistic studies to ' Academy of Fine Arts of Venice and in 2005 he participated at the 51st Venice Biennale, the group Temperaturambiente[1][2] inside the Italian pavilion, the same year he exhibited at '"Exposition des Italiens peintre à Paris", with the works cataloged edition "LEI".
In 2006 he was assistant to Archeoclub affresco and techniques of mural painting at the island of Lazaretto Novo in the Venetian Lagoon. In 2010, follow the direction of hypermedia museum exhibition of the great exhibition "Mattia Bortoloni, Piazzetta, Giovanni Battista Tiepolo: the 'Veneto 700" at the Palace of oaks Rovigo ", in collaboration with Vittorio Sgarbi.[3][4] With which one will win the 1st prize of the awards Mediastars. The same year will be selected among the co-directors of the first social history of the movie Life in a Day, produced by Ridley Scott and directed by Oscar winner Kevin MacDonald; The project of crowdsourcing film attended by more than 80,000 video makers from 192 countries in the world, 344 of them will be chosen.[5][6]
In 2011, participate in the second feature in crowdsourcing from Scott Free Productions, Britain in a Day, held in collaboration with the BBC in the UK.
Attended by more than 2,500 video-makers, will be selected from among the 312 co-directors of which he is the only Italian.[7][8] In 2013 he won the Musiclip Festival in Barcelona in the category of Best Director (Mejor Dirección Novel, 2013), with the videoclip of "Nuove prospettive" by Cristian Imparato.[9] In 2014 directs the Giusi Merli actress in the short movie Giulia's keys (original title: Le note di Giulia), receives the nomination for best short film at the David di Donatello Awards 2015.
In 2016 he participated in the TED (conference) of Castelfranco Veneto with his own speech "The modern storm", inspired by the opera The Tempest (Giorgione).[10]