British servicemen who were killed on D-Day will be remembered through a series of handmade silhouette statues.
Artist Dan Barton has led a team of volunteers on the For Your Tomorrow project, which features 1,475 silhouettes.
Each statue represents a serviceman who died under British command on 6 June 1944.
They will be taken to Normandy next month and remain on display until the end of August.
Mr Barton says he is funding the installation on a “shoestring budget” and that it’s likely to be the last major anniversary the veterans will be around to see.
“Most of the survivors are 98, 100-odd you know, so sadly that is an end of an era for me. So I think it’s hugely important.”
The D-Day landingssaw the Allied forces mount a huge invasion of Nazi-occupied France that ultimately tipped the course of the Second World War in their favour.
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Paul Harris’s grandfather, George, fought in Normandy and was killed on 7 August 1944.
He says seeing the silhouettes in person brings him closer to his grandfather.
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“He gave his life like so many others,” says Mr Harris.
“He who was just a regular guy, just a labourer – a farm worker, he wasn’t a fighting man at all. He joined up to do his bit for the country and never came back.
“You and I have never been asked to go off and do what they had to do. I don’t know that I could.
“I guess you would. You’d have to man up and do it. How awful to go off to a country you’ve never been to before.”
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