A post-Brexit portrait of life in Gibraltar

A post-Brexit portrait of life in Gibraltar
What happens now? — The UK territory, which lies on the southern tip of Spain, is facing an uncertain future thanks to the result of the EU referendum. In an ongoing project, photographer Luke Archer captures the fallout.

Brexit is drawing closer. In March 2019, the United Kingdom will be officially parting ways with its European neighbours – ending a process which would have taken, by then, nearly three years to carry out.

Somewhat terrifyingly, no one has a clue what this imminent future will look like. If the media’s back-to-back reports are to be believed, Brexit negotiations are nowhere near their conclusion. Instead, the process has been rife with party infighting, ill-timed power grabs, and near-constant ideological dissent.

One place that is really feeling the effects of this uncertainty is Gibraltar. The British territory, known as ‘The Rock’, lies on the southern tip of Spain, and has spent years balancing its strong physical connection to European with its proudly British heritage. Unfortunately, despite 96 per cent of its residents voting to Remain, they will soon be facing the unwanted consequences of the Leave referendum result.

“Brexit was a total shock!” says photographer Luke Archer, who has been addressing this strange cultural dichotomy in his ongoing project, The Rock.

“The crux of the issue for Gibraltar is the land border with Spain, and being able to keep that open and flowing well. Most of Gibraltar’s food crosses it and thousands of workers, mainly Spanish, commute to work across it. Many Gibraltarians I met feel the Spanish workers on the other side have more to lose so there will have to be a mutually beneficial solution. It is in everyone’s interest to keep the status quo.”

Archer, who has family in Gibraltar, has been returning to shoot in the UK territory since the referendum in 2016. Fusing street portraiture with landscape shots, his work captures a region as it grapples with an uncertain future and an increasingly fraught identity crisis.

“There is a general sense of Brexit looming, but people weren’t overly worried,” he adds, hopefully. “The current socialist Spanish government seems to be striking a much friendlier tone and in a strange way, this adversity could bring the two countries closer together.” 

See more of Luke Archer’s work on his official website.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Latest on Huck

Meet the shop cats of Hong Kong’s Sheung Wan district
Culture

Meet the shop cats of Hong Kong’s Sheung Wan district

Feline good — Traditionally adopted to keep away rats from expensive produce, the feline guardians have become part of the central neighbourhood’s fabric. Erica’s online series captures the local celebrities.

Written by: Isaac Muk

How trans rights activism and sex workers’ solidarity emerged in the ’70s and ’80s
Activism

How trans rights activism and sex workers’ solidarity emerged in the ’70s and ’80s

Shoulder to Shoulder — In this extract from writer Jake Hall’s new book, which deep dives into the history of queer activism and coalition, they explore how anti-TERF and anti-SWERF campaigning developed from the same cloth.

Written by: Jake Hall

A behind the scenes look at the atomic wedgie community
Culture

A behind the scenes look at the atomic wedgie community

Stretched out — Benjamin Fredrickson’s new project and photobook ‘Wedgies’ queers a time-old bullying act by exploring its erotic, extreme potential.

Written by: Isaac Muk

“Welcome to the Useless Class”: Ewan Morrison in conversation with Irvine Welsh
Culture

“Welcome to the Useless Class”: Ewan Morrison in conversation with Irvine Welsh

For Emma — Ahead of the Scottish author’s new novel, he sat down with Irvine Welsh for an in-depth discussion of its dystopic themes, and the upcoming AI “tsunami”.

Written by: Irvine Welsh

“Struggle helps people come together”: Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory
Music

“Struggle helps people come together”: Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory

Huck’s February interview — To hear more about the release of the indie darling’s first collaborative album, we caught up with her and Devra Hoff to hear about the record, motherhood in music and why the ’80s are back,

Written by: Isaac Muk

Nxdia: “Poems became an escape for me”
Music

Nxdia: “Poems became an escape for me”

What Made Me — In this series, we ask artists and rebels about the forces and experiences that shaped who they are. Today, it’s Egyptian-British alt-pop shapeshifter Nxdia.

Written by: Nxdia

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now