Documentary Projects Finalist
Over a period of eight months, Alexandre Bagdassarian documented the daily lives of young detainees in one of France’s six juvenile prisons, one of the country’s least visible institutions. The photographer sought to understand what it means to be young and confronted with prison, not from the perspective of legal texts or institutional discourse, but by observing the trajectories, voices, and bodies of those living this reality. Often relegated to silence or the margins, their stories are rarely told, and when they are, they reach us through a media or political lens, the photographer explains, sometimes ‘shaped by security driven ideologies’.
Alexandre Bagdassarian (b. 1992) is a French documentary photographer who studied at ENSAD Paris. Nourished by a personal and social revolt, his work has gradually focused on youth, exploring the connections between intimate experiences and political coercion, whether they are physical, social, or symbolic
The cells are delicate spaces to photograph, as they are simultaneously impersonal and intimate. Once inside, the eye fixates on the few elements that make up the space: a window, bars, a simple bed, a plank serving as a desk, and sometimes a book or a few drawings.