D-Day Revisited: Ian Patrick’s “Anonymous Heroes”

Cover of Ian Patrick's Portraits: Anonymous Heroes
Cover of Ian Patrick's Portraits: Anonymous Heroes

On this anniversary of D-Day, June 6, 1944, the start of the 10-week Invasion of Normandy, France Revisited honors veterans and the fallen through the work of American photographer Ian Patrick and his book Portraits: Anonymous Heroes.

Born in 1951, Ian Patrick became interested in photographing veterans when he first accompanied his father William on a visit to Normandy. The elder Patrick, to whom the book is dedicated, landed at Utah Beach on June 17, 1944. In his portrait of 1994, the 50th anniversary, he stands by the grave of a high school friend in the American Cemetery.

American photographer Ian Patrick in his studio by Canal Saint Martin in Paris. Photo GLKraut
American photographer Ian Patrick in his studio by Canal Saint Martin in Paris. Photo GLKraut

For the past 25 years, Ian Patrick has been photographing the sites, people, and events surrounding D-Day ceremonies in Normandy. In this collection of portraits, released last year on the occasion of the 65th anniversary of the D-Day landing with the support of France’s national Musée de l’Armée, he set out to present “The horror of war and the joy of the liberated, two intangible sensations which have been my inspiration for this photo essay.”

The black-and-white portraits of participants in the events of June 1944—American, British, French, German—and the brief accompanying texts (in French and in English) of their memories and reflections are at once proud, moving, and humble.

Cover of Ian Patrick's Portraits: Anonymous Heroes
Cover of Ian Patrick’s Portraits: Anonymous Heroes

Ian Patrick has lived in Paris since 1979 and now also has French citizenship. His work has appeared The New York Times Magazine, Esquire, and Rolling Stone, among other publications. Bob Marley and Andy Warhol are among the many well-known faces whose portraits he captured while working in New York in the 1970s.

Reduced-size copies of some of the photographs Portraits: Anonymous Heroes can be seen at d-dayportraits.com. For more examples of Ian Patrick’s work also see ianpatrickphotos.com and ianpatrickimages.com.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.