A woman, Amada Torruella, smiles and looks to the camera as wind blows her hair. In the background we can see a cloudy sky and a body of water.
Amada Torruella
Photo courtesy Amada Torruella
Director & Producer

Amada Torruella (she/they) is a Salvadoran artist, filmmaker, and film programmer raised in El Salvador and Canada, and based between El Salvador and the United States. Amada’s work centers joy and tenderness in the mundane, as well as women’s stories and their care for their environment, each other, and their communities. She is passionate about exploring memory, grief, Central American landscapes, and the relationship between people and their home. In 2023, their short documentary, la isla, about mass detentions in El Salvador, premiered with The New Yorker. Amada’s work has also been featured at Blackstar Film Festival, New Orleans Film Festival, and the San Diego Latino Film Festival. In 2020, Amada co-founded ZOLAS, a multidisciplinary cultural studio based in San Salvador, run by women artists. She was a 2021 JustFilms Ford Foundation/Rockwood Institute Fellow and a Voices of Our Nations Art (VONA) Fellow.

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