incarcerated citizens work together with french artist JR to realize the tehachapi project


designboom_within the walls of tehachapi california correctional institution, french artist JR creates a one-of-a-kind art activation. at the maximum security 4 facility in southern california, JR and his team capture the portraits and stories of former and currently incarcerated citizens that are keenly focused on rehabilitation, as well as some of the prison staff. together as a large team, the artist, staff, and incarcerated men pasted the compiled portraits as a large-scale mural across the institution’s recreation space.


together with staff and incarcerated men of the california correctional institution, french artist JR makes use of 338 strips of paper with his tehachapi project. with the collaborative help of the entire team, the wheatpasting of each large strip was completed within a few hours. while the work appears almost as an obscured abstraction at the level of the ground, the final installation was photographed in its entirety upon its completion, shot from a birds-eye view with a drone.


viewers have the opportunity to hear conversations with the former and currently incarcerated men, as well as the participating staff through the JR mural app. while some discuss their sense of personal identity versus how they present themselves within their context, others comment that the project offers a new chance to be proud of something they are doing. the tehachapi project explores the capacity for personal rehabilitation as well as the inclination to quickly give up on people. outside the bigger project the team pastes large-scale prints along the walls — these meant to convey a sense of hope — which depict the eyes some of those who had made it out.