Friccións (Frictions)

In 2002, the oil tanker MV Prestige sank off the coast of Galicia (Spain), creating one of Europe’s biggest environmental disaster. Two decades later, Photographer Ariadna Silva Fernández documents what is still visible of this ‘badly healed wound’, acting as a reminder but also a warning sign for future generations.

Photography Ariadna Silva


The Prestige catastrophe is an event on the brink of oblivion. Certainly, it could be an echo, a resonance. A badly healed wound.

The 64,000 tonnes of heavy fuel oil spilled by the oil tanker in November 2002 caused one of the biggest ecocide in the history of Europe. A serious negligence within the decadent, polluting and close to collapse model that feeds the world, was able to bury hundreds of kilometers of Galician coast.



“The oil tanker in November 2002 caused one of the biggest ecocide in the history of Europe.”



About Ariadna

Ariadna Silva Fernández (b. 1996, Galicia, Spain) In her photographic and audiovisual work, she builds a sensitive and critical view of issues of social interest. She investigates the concepts of forgetfulness, identity and territory from her closest context through projects that deal with ecocides, the peripheries or autobiography.

She has exhibited individually at the PHotoEspaña Off Festival (My Name’s Lolita Art Gallery), at the Marisa Marimón Gallery or at the Kiosco Alfonso in A Coruña. She has also exhibited in group exhibitions in Encontros da Imagem, in the City of Culture of Galicia or in the Church of the University of Santiago de Compostela.

In 2018 she published her first photobook ‘Fillos do vento’ (BANCO Editorial), a personal story about the Rapa das Bestas de Sabucedo and in 2019 she self-published ‘Historias minimas’, a fanzine of intimate stories.

To see more of his work, visit her website or follow her on Instagram


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