A look at the margins of history through the work of Nicolás Combarro
The Galician artist presents his creation subject Silence, the result of the Tender Puentes residency program at the MUN, alongside a selection of his work in which he analyzes the ideologies hidden behind different architectures.
Curated by Marta Ramos-Yzquierdo, it presents more than 200 works that invite viewers to look closely at the relationships between reality and fiction, report forgetting, the individual and the collective.
25 | 02 | 2026
The sample a otro lado (Looking Away), which opens today at the MUN, is presented as a compilation of forgotten architecture and places, brought together by Galician artist Nicolás Combarro in his last six projects. Nicolás Combarro travels around Spain, where he finds forgotten elements that he photographs in order to intervene in them and thus shed light on a silenced and forgotten past and reality.
The exhibition, which features more than 200 works by the artist, is presented as an opportunity to analyze work methodology, as well as a dialogue between his different creations, in which he reflects on oversights or exclusions through architecture at different historical moments and in diverse socioeconomic contexts.
Mirar a otro lado (Looking Away) has its origins in the process that Combarro carried out during his residency program Tender Puentes (Building Bridges) at the MUN: while working in the museum's archives, the artist came across the photograph: France 1939. Bram concentration camp. Dormitory, 1939-39, taken by Agustí Centelles during his period of captivity in this concentration camp. The image sample interior of the place where Centelles, along with the other men, lived during the initial period of his exile. Although this photograph was found in the archives of the MUN collection, these camps and what happened in them are not as well known as those built in Nazi Germany, for example. This fact prompted the artist to continue his research the concentration and repression camps that existed both in our country and in France.
In Spain, there were more than 300 camps, in which between 700,000 and one million people were crammed together. This reality remained hidden for years and has only been explored in depth since 2018, when the military archives of the period were declassified. It is these camps and these realities that Combarro recovers, so as not to forget, in his latest creation: subject silence. Nicolás Combarro returns at night to the places where these buildings were erected, or in many cases their foundations and small remains, to confront what is left of them. There, he bathes them in light, making the invisible visible, and captures them with his camera in disturbing images, where the remains of these places of repression and concentration are presented in bare landscapes. "I photographed them at night, so that the contexts are more separated from the present. I only illuminate the architectural element I am going to talk about, which gives it great symbolism, a kind of monument to the report those places," says the artist.
Among the works in this series, we can find the remains of the newly built camp in Miranda de Ebro (Burgos), which served as model the design of similar centers throughout the peninsula; the image of the foundations of the place of repression located in San Cristóbal (Navarra); and the Carabanchel prison (Madrid), which was built entirely by the prisoners themselves.
But work process does not end with documenting and intervening in these places; rather, it serves as a starting point for a much broader process of analysis, documentation, and study of these contexts. That is why, alongside the works, we find part of an entire documentary archive that the artist has been compiling: from plans and postcards to official protocols and photographs from that period. In the case of Spain, these materials are also scarce. It is precisely this scarcity, this absence of images of these realities, that leads him to fill in series with pieces such as the Archaeologies, in which the artist collects "minor" remains found around these architectures, which are represented through small translucent sculptures and photographs, as well as a projection in which the synthesis of the architecture of the new fields can be explored.
In the sample a otro lado (Looking Away), the series subject silencio ( subject silence) is presented in dialogue with a selection of projects from his career, in which the artist also works on types of architecture that resist the passage of time and the realities in which they are developed. The exhibition completed with the series Sotterranei, in which Nicolás Combarro delves into the underground of Rome and Naples, highlighting a hidden reality unknown to the eye. Alongside it, Desvelar, desplazar (Uncover, Displace) offers a glimpse of what remains of the old Tobacco Factory in Madrid, now converted into a cultural space. Both series are examples of interventions in which he uses light projection as a strategy to dialogue with architecture. The series Arquitectura espontánea (Spontaneous Architecture) encompasses examples of self-construction or types of unregulated architecture in a compilation of images and formal exercises on them. This subject interventions, plays of color, scale, and sculptural exercises with elements found in the spaces themselves, is what the artist carries out in situ in the series Hidden Architecture, in which he works on examples of "black works": those abandoned buildings that remain unfinished in the landscape, and in the Black Series, focused on the study and intervention of mining and industrial heritage. "In all of them," says Combarro, "there is an attempt to use artistic language to talk about very complex contexts that are outside the usual communication circuit. I believe that as artists, and being aware of our historical, political, and social context, we can activate it with the tools we have. In my case, I have worked on the report; the distance from the event allows me to have a perspective that makes these interventions," he says, "bring these forgotten elements back to life in the architecture."
All these interventions converge in the atrium, where they enter into a dialogue that clearly presents the work methodology. Nicolás exhibition at the MUN is presented as a Catalog actions and documentation that allow him to investigate the ideologies hidden behind different types of architecture, but also the relationships between reality and fiction, report forgetting, and the individual and the collective. As curator Martas Ramos-Yzquierdo points out, "Nicolás is ultimately acting on architectures that are not normally found in the grand narratives but are hidden from view; hence the degree scroll: looking away, so that we can question the contexts in which they are generated and the ideologies that sustain them."
This exhibition supported by Casa de Velázquez as framework its financial aid fund.