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The region is a good fit for Sundance festival

▶ Chris Newbould talks to the head of the organisati­on behind the Sundance Film Festival

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Could the Gulf be about to get its very own internatio­nal edition of the renowned Sundance Film Festival? The festival already runs internatio­nal events in Hong Kong and London, as well as Sundance Labs all over the world – including a Screenwrit­ing Lab in Amman and a Theatre Lab in Marrakech – and with plans to extend the internatio­nal festivals further afield, the Middle East is very much in the reckoning, says Sundance Institute’s executive director Keri Putnam.

“We want to bring public events to the world to showcase the work we curate, but also to take part in an exchange,” she says. “We already have a festival in Hong Kong; we’ve been in London five years now; and in concert with the Lab programmes, we already run in many regions – we’ll continue to have public events in other regions, including the Middle East and North Africa.”

Putnam adds that we shouldn’t get too excited just yet, though – the next Sundance internatio­nal festival isn’t confirmed. “There are no definitive plans for where the next region will be, and I should point out that we do our regional events with partners, and they’re smaller, four day events – we don’t just move the Sundance fest to another region, we wouldn’t have capacity,” she cautions. “The key is to find the right partners and the right region that we can bring our curatorial work to, but also to be able to showcase works from that region and make the Sundance Festival unique to that region.”

Putnam was in Abu Dhabi attending the CultureSum­mit, and that theme of exchange is clearly something she feels is crucial, both at her own events and events such as the CultureSum­mit. “It’s absolutely critical,” she says. “If we can understand each other through stories that we tell as individual­s, rather than through a polarising media or in a commercial context; if we can create frameworks where we can hear one another’s stories more authentica­lly and give space to have real dialogue, that’s what’s going to allow us to get past the superficia­l divisions that prevent us from listening to one another.”

Sundance itself is very much about giving a voice to the unheard, and even though it is now the world’s most successful independen­t film festival and market, achieving a perfect blend of critical and commercial success, Putnam insists that, as a non-profit organisati­on, the Sundance Institute is all about the creativity, not the commercial success that has sprung up around it. “Well, look, the main way to get a film seen is by having some sort of distributo­r relationsh­ip, of course, but we don’t judge the work from our festival or labs on what those market outcomes are, we just try to offer the best curation we can and the best collection of artists we can,” she says.

For Putnam, Sundance is all about getting unknown films seen in the first place. If bigger audiences come as a result, that is simply a bonus, she insists. “I see giving a platform to that non-commercial work as vital to our non-profit mission, because if storytelli­ng isn’t received by an audience, then what’s it for? Being able to be that conduit between independen­t artists and a curious marketplac­e that wants to find new work from voices they haven’t heard about, that’s what our curation is about and that’s what we take a lot of pride in,” she says. “Of course it’s great if work from Sundance finds its way to a wider audience, too, but that’s not our focus and we’d never try and push an artist towards a certain distributo­r or platform. The media focuses on the big acquisitio­ns that take place at Sundance, but we’re really all about the community and the artists.”

And that’s what brings Putnam to Abu Dhabi – seeking new artists, new communitie­s, perspectiv­es and voices, and that allimporta­nt exchange. “It’s been a great few days,” she says. “I’ve met people from about 80 countries, which is a great experience, and I’ve had some great conversati­ons,” she says. “It’s good to be able to lift out of the myopic context of whatever country or position or organisati­on you come from. Being at an event with people from really different contexts, and sit across a table and have a conversati­on, is a great position to be in.”

Putnam cites gender issues as one particular area where her horizons have been broadened during her time in Abu Dhabi, and she hopes she can take home some useful lessons. “The way the gender debate is playing out in the US in film and media, that’s very important to me, and something we work on a lot, but it’s very different for women in Africa or the Middle East – I’m going to take home an eye-opening awareness of how gender plays for women in those regions, and that’s important,” she says. “I’m definitely going back with a very different awareness.”

The Sundance Institute is all about the creativity, not the commercial success that has sprung up around it

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 ?? Getty ?? Sundance Institute’s executive director Keri Putnam was in Abu Dhabi to attend the CultureSum­mit
Getty Sundance Institute’s executive director Keri Putnam was in Abu Dhabi to attend the CultureSum­mit

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