Axel Grünewald (*1954) looks at the edges of the present. For more than five years, he has repeatedly travelled through the coastal regions of Morocco and southern Spain, to the continental border between Europe and Africa. His photographs show the sea, barren landscapes, and people on both sides of the Strait of Gibraltar. However, Grunewald doesn't name any concrete place; his images do not belong to either side. They're at once empathetic and oppressive, depicting the invisible and seemingly insurmountable space separating North and South where people are 'stranded', defenseless, with all their hopes for a better life in the unknown. Axel Grunewald looks to where Europe turns away. Text in English and German. SELLING POINTS: . An empathetic photographic study, documenting the current refugee situation in the 'nowhere-land' of the continental border between Europe and Africa . Daring images of an urgent socio-political issue 92 colour images