Inka Martí

Inka Martí Kiemann (born 6 January 1964) is a Spanish journalist, editor, writer, and photographer, the wife of fellow publisher Jacobo Siruela and Countess consort of Siruela.[1]

Inka Martí
Born (1964-01-06) 6 January 1964
Beckum, West Germany
Alma materUniversity of Barcelona
OccupationJournalist, editor, photographer
Notable work
  • Cuaderno de noche
  • Espacios oníricos
Spouse(s)Jacobo Siruela (2004–present)
Websitewww.inkamarti.com

Biography

Born in Beckum, West Germany, Inka Martí studied Hispanic philology at the University of Barcelona.[2] At age 17, she began to work as a model, appearing as the face of numerous advertising campaigns. She also worked as a model in Japan, Greece, England, Austria, and Germany.

In 1986, at age 22, she made her debut before the cameras of Televisión Española, in the cultural contest Hablando claro, supported by the Royal Spanish Academy and designed by Professor Francisco Rico.[3] A year later she shared a set with Manuel Hidalgo on the daily magazine program Tal cual, where she covered film, theater, and music,[4] and with Isabel Gemio on Un verano tal cual.

In 1989 she accompanied Miguel de la Quadra-Salcedo in the first edition of Aventura 92, and in 1992 she presented the current events and interview show Peligrosamente juntas with Marisol Galdón.[5] That July and August, coinciding with the Olympic Games, she hosted the daily program Barcelona: Juegos de sociedad.[6] Along with Constantino Romero, she was the voice of the Barcelona Olympics at the opening and closing ceremonies,[2] which were broadcast to 3.5 billion spectators from around the world. That November, she began appearing on La 2's news program El informe del día, directed by José Antonio Martínez Soler.[7] Martí directed the Television Department for the advertising and television production company Ovideo. Her productions included five episodes of the series Letter from Home for the American channel CBS.

After that experience, she moved away from the cameras for a time and did not return until 1998, when she shot a five-episode documentary on Spain for the BBC, Spain, Inside Out, which was broadcast in several English-speaking countries. In 1999, this time on the Catalan regional station TV3, she presented OK!, a 90-minute daily magazine directed by Alfonso Arús,[2] and No cal somiar, a travel program produced by Ramón Colom.

In 2005 she founded the publishing house Ediciones Atalanta with her husband, the editor Jacobo Siruela, and in 2011 she started a new artistic career as a photographer, publishing the book Cuaderno de noche, a compilation of 65 dreams selected from thousands recorded in her eleven notebooks written since 2000.[8] This was accompanied in digital format by Espacios oníricos, which photographically complements the world recreated in her dream journey.[9][10]

Her photographic work was shown in group exhibitions in Madrid, Barcelona, Seville, and Paris from 2013 to 2014. Her first solo exhibition took place at Àmbit Galeria d'Art in Barcelona during the spring of 2015.[11]

On 17 April 2016 she contributed a photo essay on beauty to the new magazine Fashion and Arts, and on 9 July she opened an exhibition in the Patrick Domken gallery of Cadaqués.[12]

In April 2017 she was part of journalist María Fernández-Miranda's collective book No madres, telling the stories of women who do not want to or cannot be mothers and who make up the so-called Generación NoMo (No Mother Generation).[13]

In January 2018 she was part of La generación del 87. Orígenes y destinos. 1987–2017, an exhibition of portraits of great photographers, where she was shown to have joined the 87 representatives of a generation that the magazine La Luna de Madrid included in a special issue in 1987.[14][15]

Works

  • 1999: Otto (Barcanova, Barcelona), children's book, ISBN 9788448907013
  • 2007: El tresor de Nova York (Museo d'Art, Girona), ISBN 9788439372998
  • 2011: Cuaderno de noche (Ediciones Atalanta, Vilaür), ISBN 9788493846619, accompanied by digital work Espacios oníricos

References

  1. Pita, Elena (20 April 2013). "La condesa culta" [The Cultured Countess]. Yo Dona (in Spanish). pp. 28–33. Retrieved 30 November 2018 via issuu.
  2. López-Galiacho Perona, Juan Luis (March 2000). El oligopolio catalán en los medios de comunicación españoles [The Catalan Oligopoly in the Spanish Media] (PDF) (Thesis) (in Spanish). Madrid. pp. 402–403. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  3. Contreras, José Miguel (8 October 1987). "'Hablando claro', un concurso sobre el uso del castellano" ['Hablando claro', a Contest About the Use of Spanish]. El País (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  4. Armada, Alfonso (1 February 1988). "'Tal cual' sustituye desde hoy a 'La tarde' en la sobremesa". El País (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  5. "Peligrosamente juntas / La 2 (19.00)". El País (in Spanish). 30 January 1992. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  6. Ramírez, Lluisa (26 July 1992). "Inka Martí estrena hoy en TVE-1 'Barcelona: juegos de sociedad'". El País (in Spanish). Barcelona. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  7. Albert, Antonio (2 November 1992). "El informe del día". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  8. Castanedo, Fernando (15 October 2011). "Cuaderno de noche". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  9. Pron, Patricio (8 May 2017). "Narra un sueño y pierde un lector" [Tell a Dream and Lose a Reader]. El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  10. Paquita, Flamenquita. "La fotografía es una cápsula del tiempo en un haz de luz" [Photography is a Time Capsule in a Beam of Light]. Dehumano (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 29 June 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  11. Massot, Josep (17 April 2015). "Inka Martí expone sus 'Paisajes de viento'". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 6 December 2017. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  12. Fuentes, Sònia (13 July 2016). "Inka Martí proposa un viatge interior a través de la fotografia" [Inka Martí Proposes an Inner Journey Through Photography]. Empordà (in Catalan). Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  13. García Manso, Beatriz (9 April 2017). "'Parir es una opción, no una obligación'" ['Giving Birth is an Option, Not an Obligation']. El Mundo Yodona (in Spanish). Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  14. "Los rostros de la movida: así eran y así son 30 años después" [The Faces of the Movement: How They Were and How They Are 30 Years Later]. El País (in Spanish). 17 January 2018. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  15. "'La generación del 87' de La Luna de Madrid, la evolución del retrato español" ['La generación del 87' from La Luna de Madrid, the Evolution of the Spanish Portrait]. Clavoardiendo (in Spanish). 16 January 2018. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
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