Brian Quist
.. entered Friends World in 1997 with the goal of learning
documentary filmmaking. He made his first film at the North American
Center, investigating the dismissal and disrespect of a group of minority
custodians on campus. Brian spent his second year living in Northern
India where he filmed his second documentary, WE ARE REFUGEES. That
film follows two Tibetan refugees for seven months and shows how they
adjust to life in exile. WE ARE REFUGEES was met with great praise
when it was released in 1999 and has been circulating among college
campuses and film festivals ever since. Taking a leave of absence
from Friens World, Brian began pre-production on A DAY IN THE HOPE
OF AMERICA, a feature length documentary that was filmed entirely
on December 31, 1999 and goes inside the lives and minds of four unique
Americans as they face the last 24 hours of the millennium. Brian
returned to Friends World in fall 2001 and, similtaneously was able
to finish the film in March 2002. (Please refer to text on the premiere
and acclaim below). Brian spent the spring 2002 semester in Paris
where he wrote his thesis on the French ethnographer and filmmaker
Jean Rouch, and took time to promiote his film work in Europe.
Documenting the Globe
By Selim Algar
For Brian Quist, globalization means something
more than free trade agreements. The 22-year-old documentary filmmaker
and soon to be graduate of the Friends World program at Southampton
College is the creative force behind Global Griot Productions, an
internationally-minded film group dedicated to the promotion of
perspective.
This week, Mr. Quist hosted a screening of his
documentary, "We Are Refugees" on Wednesday at Duke Hall at Southampton
College, which has been the international headquarters for the Friends
World Program. The program’s main office will relocate to London
at the end of this year.
Founded by Quakers in 1965, Mr. Quist’s roving
alma mater requires classroom study, language training and fieldwork
in at least two foreign countries. The Seattle native spent his
sophomore year studying in India, where he developed an interest
in the plight of Tibetan refugees. "We Are Refugees" shadows a monk
and a young girl as they adapt to exile in India. Lobsang Chenjor
is a former political prisoner who spent 11 years in prison before
fleeing to India. Tsering Lhamo escaped to pursue an education unavailable
at home.
"I wanted to present the issues that weren’t being
exposed at the Free Tibet concerts," he said in an interview last
weekend. Using only a basic camcorder and a microphone, Mr. Quist
captured countless hours of footage and honed it into a cohesive
documentary. "At first I didn’t think it held weight," he said.
"But now that I look at it I really think it does. The simplicity
of the technology is kind of appropriate because of the simplicity
of the people and subject matter. The content carries it."
The experiential approach of Friends World, according
to Mr. Quist, thrust him into professionalism when most college
students were still sifting through majors. "The program is basically
about young kids getting out there and trying on different hats,"
he said. "We used to say that people in the program started their
careers before they even graduated. It really has a global context."
After four years of scholarly globetrotting, graduates
fan out into vocations as varied as the countries where they study.
"People are doing everything, across the board," he said. "Artists,
poets, people in economics. Everything."
This emphasis on diversity of perspective infuses
Mr. Quist’s second major project, "A Day in the Hype of America."
While focusing on a domestic rather than an international issue,
the piece follows the lives of four unique and very dissimilar Americans
on the cusp of the new millennium.
The project was inspired by a chance glance at
a photography book at a garage sale that presented the work of several
photographers dispatched to various regions around the country to
capture "life" in the span of 24 hours. "I thought of applying that
concept to the millennium," the filmmaker recalled.
To that end, Mr. Quist rallied 25 friends and filmmakers
on a pro bono basis, divided them into six crews and dispatched
them to six cities. The $40,000 project was financed by a group
of investors with whom Quist entered into a future profit-sharing
arrangement. They shot for one day, December 31, 1999. "We ended
up with 110 hours of footage," he said.
Though they whittled down the footage to coverage
of four people from the six cities, they still faced a daunting
editing process. "We wanted to really make it professional," he
said. "To take it out of the student movie category."
Specifically, the film seeks to analyze the formation
of and reaction to the American hype machine, millennium style.
Reverend Billy is an anti-establishment Times Square street preacher.
Keng is a backup singer for a New Orleans funk band who rings in
the New Year by sleeping in and preparing for a millennium performance.
Jacque is an Arizona environmentalist engaged in frenetic Y2K preparation.
And Albert White Hat is a South Dakota Sioux Indian who is asked
to host a millennium Pow Wow. "It is now in a beautiful 90-minute
state," said Mr. Quist.
The soundtrack includes the careening elegance
of electronic music and the gritty minimalism of hip-hop. He is
currently shopping the piece to film festivals around the world.
Satisfaction with the final product has obscured
the $30,000 Mr. Quist owes in film costs. But with one film in the
initial stages of distribution and a second one in postproduction,
Mr. Quist must grapple with the stark realities of independent filmmaking.
He continues to seek out investors. For those interested in supporting
his projects, Mr. Quist can be reached at (718) 599- 9682.
"Global Griot has accomplished a lot more at this
point than I thought it would have. I am just thrilled to be involved
with film," the documentation said.
"I think it is a young art form and I want to be
a part of it." Judging from the expansive breadth of his efforts
and positive critical response, Mr. Quist appears poised to do just
that.
- SELIM ALGAR
Reprinted with permission from The Southampton Press,
12/06/01. Copyright 2001 Southampton Press
|