Pablo Ganguli is a cultural entrepreneur based in Britain. He founded Liberatum because of his belief in the power of connecting people from different countries through inspiring cultural platforms. Over the past eight years, Pablo has created and directed a wide range of arts and cultural, media and literary festivals in different parts of the world. Since 2001, Pablo has collaborated with acclaimed cultural personalities, leading organisations and world-renowned brands.
What the media says about Pablo Ganguli:
Proof that entrepreneurial skill can work as well for art as for commerce. – Esquire
Culture King – GQ
Pablo, in fact only 22, is like Ariel in The Tempest, a creature who moves imperceptibly between boundaries, appears and disappears, magicks, sulks and shimmies, infuriates and intoxicates. The shape-shifter wears sequinned gowns and knitted hats, holds you with his green-lensed eyes. – The Independent
The promoter of the whole thing rejoices in the name of Pablo Ganguli. I had imagined a bearded fiftysomething professor of Anglo-Arabic literature. Pablo, who has the flamboyant look of an angel in a renaissance Annunciation, is 21 years old. – The Daily Telegraph
The 22-year-old Indian-born cultural impresario has broadened our horizons by organising festivals in Papua New Guinea, Morocco and Delhi, getting the great and the good to attend. – Observer Magazine (The Observer)
But authors, MPs, holy men and Hollywood or even Bollywood aside, the most noticeable figure, in the end, was the festival founder Pablo Ganguli. At the age of 22, with the face of a young Elizabeth Taylor and the mascara and make-up to match, this unlikely literary powerhouse had managed to dream up and then pull off such a successful festival.- The Times
Festival King – The Observer
Ganguli had made the remarkable journey from a student studying French in Calcutta to, seemingly, one of the world’s leading literary salonistas in just three years. – Evening Standard
The latest brainchild of the young literary impresario Pablo Ganguli, whose ambitious festival-making has so far encompassed events in Morocco, Delhi and Papua New Guinea (with plans afoot for Jordan, Turkey and Malta), this should be an especially interesting event in the context of the current intellectual climate in Russia, where freedom of speech is increasingly becoming an issue. – Financial Times






