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From
NPR:
It's impolite to stare. But when it comes to severely injured
soldiers, maybe we don't look enough; or maybe we'd rather not see
wounded veterans at all.
That's the message you get from photographer David Jay's Unknown Soldier
series. Jay spent three years taking portraits of veterans returning
from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but before that — for nearly 20
years — he was a fashion photographer. His stylish, artful images
appeared in magazines like Vogue and Cosmopolitan.
"The fashion stuff is beautiful and sexy — and completely untrue," he says.
Truth became the focus of Jay's work for the first time about 10 years ago, when he started The SCAR Project,
a series of portraits of women, naked from the waist up, with
mastectomy scars. Around the time he was taking those photos, he was
also trying to comprehend the news coming from Iraq and Afghanistan.
"We
hear about 'this number of men were killed' and 'this many were
injured,'" Jay says, "and we think of them — maybe they got shot — or we
don't really picture what these injured men look like."
So Jay visited Walter Reed National Military Medical Center
outside Washington, D.C., and one of the first injured soldiers he met
there was Capt. Nicholas Vogt. In 2011, an explosive device detonated
under Vogt's feet in Afghanistan, nearly killing him. His legs had to be
amputated.
"I had never seen anything like it," Jay says. "It appeared that he ended at his waist."
He asked Vogt if he would be willing to be photographed.
"And
Nicholas was very kind and said, 'Listen, I understand what you're
doing but I don't think I can take part in that, certainly [not] right
now,'" Jay recalls.
About a year later, Jay was back at Walter
Reed and from across the room he heard someone yell, "Hey,
photographer!" This time, Vogt wanted to participate. He'd been working
hard at his recovery and seeing results. He was swimming a lot and he
had a girlfriend (a nurse at Walter Reed who is now his fiancé). Vogt
gave Jay permission to take his picture, but he had some parameters.
"I
wanted to make sure there was action, it was movement," Vogt says.
"Because I didn't want to portray myself as someone that's just waiting
for medical retirement and going to be stationary for the rest of my
life."
David Jay delivered. In his portrait of Vogt, he
captures that sensation of jumping into a swimming pool and feeling your
body descend to the bottom. Vogt's arms are stretched out and his eyes
are tightly shut. Beneath his black swim trunks, there is nothing.
Vogt
doesn't know how other people will react to the portrait, but he's glad
he did it. "I just know I felt fulfilled afterwards," he says. "I felt
like it represented me as a person. Yeah, I was happy with the result."
Other portraits in Jay's Unknown Soldier series are more graphic.
Take
Army Spc. Jerral Hancock (pictured): On his 21st birthday, a roadside bomb hit the
tank Hancock was driving in Iraq. The explosion sent shrapnel into his
spine, paralyzing him.
Jay's photographs of Hancock show him
with his young son — in one, their eyes are fixed on each other; in
another, they're looking at the camera. In both, the veteran is
bare-chested, revealing his tattoos and the mangled skin and bone where
his left arm was amputated.
Then there's Sgt. Joel Tavera: When a rocket hit his Humvee in
Iraq, he received third-degree burns across two-thirds of his body,
including almost all of his face.
Jay believes these wounds
belong to all of us: "You can imagine how many times each of these men
and women have heard a parent tell their child, 'Don't look. Don't stare
at him. That's rude.' I take these pictures so that we can look; we can see what we're not supposed to see. And we need to see them because we created them."
Jay believes seeing is one step closer to understanding.
The
Library of Congress has acquired images from his Unknown Soldier
collection as part of its visual documentation of the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan.