Nice! Looks a bit like a Kurume, but that could just be because of its distressed state.
I concur with @Eckoffw. Spend this year keeping it alive. Fertilize carefully.
Lots of potential for a free form bonsai clump. Personally I’d leave the old wood as is, and advise not even to attempt more bending or carving at this point. The actual base style is set unless you determine to reduce sections later on down the line.
Count on crafting the growth from here on out by clipping, bending and reducing the new growth over time to give you taper and character. btw: once azalea wood is carved you will have to keep protecting it as azalea wood often just keeps rotting back… that’s why you’ll see some old landscape azaleas with partially hollowed out trunks…. bonsai azalea are not carved often. For this reason it might be to carve things smooth, especially any hollows, to cut down the rough surface area.
The potential there reminds me in some ways of my favorite double clump ever crafted out of Japanese sourced stock by Melvin Goldstein. It’s now located at UM Ann Arbor Bonsai Garden. I know, it’s not the same, but this is to jog you to think outside the box on styling.
Good Luck with your tree!
cheers
DSD sends
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