Amares Azielos

  • Dates
    2023 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Location La Roca del Vallès, Spain

Amares Azielos explores representation in juvenile prisons with young migrants, where access to one’s own image and visual tools to preserve memory are denied.

Amares Azielos is a collaborative photography project developed inside the Juvenile Penitentiary Center of La Roca del Vallès (Sept–Dec 2023), Spain. It responds to a stark absence: young inmates—many of them migrants without social ties in the peninsula therefore no visits—experience image deprivation alongside restricted freedom. They search for their own faces in the reflections of metal doors. They have no mirrors, cameras, or phones; daily life—friendships, milestones, emotions—remains undocumented, confined to memory. In an image‑saturated world, this invisibility becomes a second, less visible punishment.

The project creates a shared space of making that deliberately suspends judgment. Rather than approaching participants through the lens of crime or institutional identity, Amares Azielos foregrounds presence, vulnerability, and attention. It exposes the tension between socially imposed categories of “good” and “bad” and the lived reality of human connection. Within this space, roles between inmates and volunteers are unsettled, acknowledging that learning and transformation move in multiple directions.

The deep blue of cyanotype—the color of the sky—becomes the project’s central visual language, grounding desires, prayers, and thoughts onto paper within the prison’s grey walls. This nineteenth‑century contact‑print process, used by Anna Atkins in British Algae, asserts women’s foundational yet long‑marginalized role in shaping science and vision, challenging the canon of photographic history. Amares Azielos extends this gesture to the right of re‑narrating lives shaped by social stigma. In cyanotype, latent images appear through sunlight, echoing a passage from incarceration back into visibility. Authorship is shared; inmates and volunteers remain visually indistinguishable, opening space for futures imagined through care and creative agency.

Developed alongside the workshops, the project generated an exhibition space inside the prison, fostering dialogue with artists including Laia Abril, Irene Zottola, Clara Gassull, Marta G. Cardellach, and Cecília Coca. As part of the process, collectively designed exhibitions, an artist-led publication serving as a tangible trace for participants, and a video documentary were produced.

Amares Azielos foregrounds process and friction, treating mediation as a space where images hold complexity rather than resolve it.

Documentary

Photobook

The Amares Azielos photobook, created with Bakoom Studio, interns, and volunteers, extends the prison experience. It opens with a grey Catalan section evoking the prison’s walls and linguistic barriers, then moves through “doors” to a white diary in Spanish, featuring handwritten texts, podcasts, a workshop calendar, and my reflections and accountability as mediator. Volunteers’ testimonies and cyanotype-inspired graphic design accompany photographs layered within the institutional space. Editing and sequencing were done entirely by participants, reinforcing collective authorship. It is a material trace of the project that all participants can keep.

© Carol Priego - Image from the Amares Azielos photography project
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For migrants, performing as “other” takes time and interaction. Amares Azielos challenges how incarcerated people are visually profiled, using shared photography to reveal the person beyond socially constructed images.

© Carol Priego - Image from the Amares Azielos photography project
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In one activity, Zakarias nervously read the group’s Spanish comments aloud—the first time he had ever spoken the language after learning it in prison. He shared his journey without dwelling on trauma, embracing a new beginning. Amares Azielos creates a space to rewrite narratives and reclaim personal histories.

© Carol Priego - Image from the Amares Azielos photography project
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Each image reflects its own conditions of making: some overexposed from sun development with staff assistance, others underexposed due to wet processing and disrupted timing—echoing the restricted rhythms and limited access within the detention center.

© Carol Priego - Image from the Amares Azielos photography project
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The images combine works by interns and volunteers, with some portraits made by one participant for another, sharing responsibility and visibility. This blurred authorship resists judgment and challenges identification, referencing penitentiary photography and 19th-century Bertillon portraits to subvert familiar codes.

© Carol Priego - Image from the Amares Azielos photography project
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Rather than capturing an image through a lens, cyanotype produces a physical trace of what was present. Some images are made from everyday materials that the youth had access to — the key for vending machines, the cords from MP3 headphones, etc. These works are a direct trace of the penitentiary space and the reality of their lifes.