June 21, 2026
Canary Islands’ Documentary Voices Look Outward as Sector Gains Range


As the Canary Islandsโ€™ audiovisual sector pushes more assertively onto the international doc scene, a cluster of producers, directors and creative executives is helping to define what production there can now mean: locally grounded, varied, outward-facing and very exportable.

Variety profiles some of the Canary Islandsโ€™ most important figures:

David Baute

Few filmmakers working in Spanish non-fiction carry the range and longevity of David Baute, whose Tinglado Films label was founded over 200 years ago. The Canary Islands-born director has moved fluently between observational documentary, climate advocacy filmmaking, and most remarkably, traditionally animated feature film, with โ€œBlack Butterfliesโ€ earning a Goya, a Platino Award, and an Oscar shortlist following its Annecy premiere in 2024. His environmental doc โ€œClimate Exodusโ€ took the Green Spike at Valladolidโ€™s Seminci. His latest, โ€œBenigno,โ€ shot entirely on Super 8 in his hometown of Garachico, world premieres at Shanghai 2026. As a producer, he shepherded โ€œSugar Islandโ€ to Venice. Current titles also include โ€œTres Balas,โ€ (in production), โ€œHuman Objectโ€ (in pre-production) and โ€œCathaysaโ€ (a documentary-animation hybrid in development). Situated between Europe, Africa and Latin America, the archipelago generates stories shaped by migration, identity, territory and environmental challenges. For documentary filmmakers, it is above all a place of stories, not simply a filming location,โ€ Baute says.

Luis Luque Oliva

Since co-founding Las Hormigas Negras in 2013, Luis Luque Oliva has built one of the Canary Islandsโ€™ most consequential production operations, working consistently across documentary, fiction, television format and advertising, often with questions of identity and ethnography close to his creative center. His flagship achievement, โ€œInsulae,โ€ the 13-episode documentary history of the Canary Islands, won in 2024 the Pello Sarasola Award for best regional television Program from regional pubcaster assn. FORTA and is now in its second season. A journalism graduate from Seville, Luque also serves as president of La Plataforma de la Tele, the association grouping the archipelagoโ€™s leading television production companies.

Cรฉsar Armas Morales

A journalist and documentary director with more than two decades steering television projects, Cรฉsar Armas Morales has established himself as one of the Canary Islandsโ€™ most consistently broadcast non-fiction voices. His work travels: โ€œThe Last Volcanoโ€ aired on Movistar+, RAI Italy, and Swedenโ€™s Axess TV; โ€œErased from the Mapโ€ appeared on TV3โ€™s prestigious โ€œSense Ficciรณโ€ strand. His most recent film, โ€œFinland, the Happiest Country,โ€ spent several weeks among Movistar+โ€™s most-watched documentaries in 2025. With โ€œFragile Islands,โ€ an environmental feature traversing the Maldives, the Philippines and Colombia, currently in pre-production, Armas is pushing toward his most internationally ambitious project yet.

Agustina Giorgi

At 24, Giorgi represents something the Canarian audiovisual sector needs urgently: young creative talent arriving from adjacent disciplines and recalibrating what island-rooted production can look and feel like. Trained at the School of Art and Higher Design of Gran Canaria, she built her early career in branding and visual communication before joining Wakai, where she created the visual identity for the FC Barcelona Femenรญ documentary, a project that went out globally on ESPN and Disney+. Wakai notes โ€œher ability to build strong and emotionally resonant brand worlds, combining aesthetic sensitivity, strategic thinking, and a distinctive creative voice.โ€

Estefanรญa Martรญn

As production and project development director at Grupo Macaronesia, Estefanรญa Martรญn occupies a quietly pivotal position in the Canary Islandsโ€™ audiovisual ecosystem. A specialist in communications and audiovisual production with deep experience across television content, documentary, institutional campaigns and strategic communications, she has spent her career turning complex, multi-stakeholder projects into high-impact deliverables for public administrations, companies and institutions at regional and national level. Her focus on designing efficient production strategies and fostering new opportunities for the sector places her at the intersection of creative development and industrial infrastructure โ€” precisely the combination the archipelagoโ€™s growing ambitions demand.

Chus Barrera

A filmmaker based in the Canary Islands with more than two decades of documentary and television work behind him, Chus Barrera represents the kind of quietly indispensable figure that sustains a regional film culture between its more visible peaks. His career begins in 2003 with โ€œEuropa, ยฟParaรญso o Espejismo?โ€ the first installment of a trilogy on immigration that continued through โ€œDjaramaโ€ โ€” co-produced with Pedro Almodรณvarโ€™s El Deseo and winner of audience prizes at both Docรบpolis and Miradas Doc โ€” and โ€œSegunda Tierra.โ€ In 2012 he co-founded Siroco alongside Pablo Barrio. His most awarded film, โ€œLos Dรญas que Vivimosโ€ (2023), a 120-minute reckoning with the La Palma volcanic eruption and its human aftermath, took best film at Finlandโ€™s Wildlife Vaasa Festival, best documentary at Madriff in Spain and best feature at MIWEFF in India. His documentaries have aired on France Tรฉlรฉvisions, RAI, Al Jazeera and Prime Video. He currently serves as head of production at Videre.

Cรฉsar Armas Morales, Estefanรญa Martรญn, Chus Barerra

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