Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

    • Artist and an Israeli filmmaker

      • Amos Gitai is an artist and an Israeli filmmaker, born 11 October 1950 in Haifa, Israel.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amos_Gitai
  1. People also ask

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Amos_GitaiAmos Gitai - Wikipedia

    Amos Gitai is an artist and an Israeli filmmaker, born 11 October 1950 in Haifa, Israel. Gitai's work was presented in several major retrospectives in Pompidou Center in Paris, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and Lincoln Center in New York, and the British Film Institute in London.

  3. Jul 24, 2024 · For a man whose personal mission has been to “build bridges through cinema,” as he told La Repubblica newspaper in an interview just published this week, his latest film may prove the most important peace-making link yet.

  4. www.imdb.com › name › nm0321159Amos Gitai - IMDb

    Amos Gitai. Director: Rabin, the Last Day. Born in Haifa in 1950, as the second son of architect Munio Weinraub and former Sionist activist Efratia Margalit. On the year of his birth, his parents changed the family name to "Gitai", which is the Hebrew translation of the German name "Weinraub".

    • January 1, 1
    • Amos Gitai
    • Haifa, Israel
  5. Sep 26, 2023 · Amos Gitai was a young architecture student in Israel when the country came under surprise attack from Syria and Egypt on Yom Kippur in 1973. An army reservist, he reported for duty and...

  6. Oct 5, 2023 · The exhibition, titled “Amos Gitai: Kippur, War Requiem” - on show at Tel Aviv Museum until mid January 2024 - focuses on Gitai’s changing relationship with his war experiences and how different iterations of his art are reflected in the eras in which they were made.

  7. Jul 14, 2024 · Talking to Variety at the Taormina Film Festival, celebrated Israeli director Amos Gitai spoke about his next feature film following his Berlinale entry “Shikun,” which has the title “Why War?”...

  8. Aug 31, 2024 · Israeli director Amos Gitai, who has repeatedly explored the Israeli-Palestinian conflict back home in his films, widens his gaze and offers a kaleidoscopic film essay on war, fuelled by a historic exchange of letters between Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud.