Jordan G. Teicher - Britain’s Very Last World War I Veterans
Nearly
9 million people were mobilized to serve in Britain ’s military during World
War I. By the time photographer Giles Price started seeking veterans of the war in 2005,
there were just 23 left. Even fewer lived long enough to have their portrait
taken. “I was aware that very few were still alive and wanted to document them
while they were alive,” Price said via email.
His
series, “The Old Guard,” features portraits of the last 12 veterans of the war,
which broke out 100 years ago next summer. At the project’s start, Price wrote
letters to each of the veterans requesting to take their photo. Thus commenced
a race against time. “I was 20 minutes from taking one sitter when the home
rang me to say he had passed that morning. He was 106,” Price said.
Price
built a small studio in each of the homes he visited and used a studio flash to
light the portraits. He shot the centenarians looking upward and ahead, in an
effort to place less emphasis on their extreme age and more on the pride and
dignity they retained over the years. “The gaze was one of reflection, be that
the war, long life, or anything that we associate with time and memories,”
Price said.
Price himself served in the Royal Marines and suffered an
injury in Iraq
in 1991. “I know how to talk to veterans and have some understanding of what
they have been through,” Price said. “It also influenced my shooting practice
and editing as to how I wanted to show them.”
Price said that although all of the veterans, who are all
now deceased, he met were very frail, all but two of them were still mentally
sharp and able to speak about their experiences in the war. “Most spoke about
the pointlessness of it all and the friends that they lost because of it. There
were no notions of heroics in what they spoke about,” Price said.
To learn more about Price’s work, visit his website
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