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Patrick 2ME's avatar

When you visit some places the “magic” is gone. You just see a pile of rocks or other remnants. Tour guides can bring them alive, as can photographs (especially when colourized I might add). I’m happy you were able to experience the places the way you did. I’m sure it will inform your art.

A great friend of mine, illustrator and reporter Richard Johnson was embedded with my team in Afghanistan for a bit. I had asked if I could get sketches of each of my guys, and supplied photos. The photos weren’t enough, he had to know who they were. It was a profound insight that he wasn’t reproducing images, he was reproducing the person. I feel this is very much what you do.

I’ve toured a number of first and Second World War battlefields in France and Flanders, and it was Dieppe, the sight of a disastrous raid by the Canadian Army in 1942, that affected me the most. Visiting the beach at Puys, looking up at the sea wall and commanding cliffs either side brought tears to my eyes. Armed with a photograph of that day, showing soldiers piled up at the sea wall, I could feel a little bit of the despair they must have felt. The impossibility of the task, to scramble up the loose shingle, no place to hide, and no way to breach the dense tangle of bared wire that waited for you if you did make it up the beach.

I hope you were able to see the Vimy memorial as well. Very awe inspiring and haunting.

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Harry Watson's avatar

Hi Marina - what a marvellously moving piece. I have not done a battlefield tour (my grandfather did 'tour' them for three years before receiving in 1917 a very serious, but fortunately for me, not fatal wound. I have holidayed in Normandy and it's impossible to travel very far without coming across clusters of graves of what were combatants on different sides now sharing the same ground. It moved me much as did my visit to the Normandy American Cemetery. As I stood on the cliffs overlooking Gold Beach at Arromanches I looked upon the sweep of shimmering sand and wondered how any who ran up it survived that first onslaught. I cannot imagine the feelings of those men. Leaping into the shallows then a lung bursting run to cover with bullets fizzing and whizzing death all around. I'm glad the grandiose remnants of the Mulberry Harbours are left to remind us we must never forget save we might repeat. I'll offer some words of Edward Thomas from his poem 'Lights Out'. Not as well known as the other 'War Poets' and dear friend of Robert Frost who wrote 'The Road not Taken' as a leg-pull of his friend as whenever the two went walking in England, Thomas, so keen to show Frost the beauty of the countryside, was never sure which was the best path. Thomas was killed in action four months after writing 'Lights Out'...

I have come to the borders of sleep, 
The unfathomable deep 
Forest where all must lose 
Their way, however straight, 
Or winding, soon or late; 
They cannot choose....

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