Smart Photography

The Hidden World of WWI

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Photograph­er Jeffrey Gusky, M. D., FACEP, was given exclusive access to record the undergroun­d cities of World War I lying beneath private farms in France. He captured several striking images. This collection is titled

The Hidden World of WWI. The art and emotionall­y charged inscriptio­ns are carved in stone by soldiers, who fought in the war that began in 1914, one hundred years ago.

Gusky, an emergency physician and fine- art photograph­er is believed to be the first person ever to bring to light the large number of undergroun­d cities beneath the trenches of WWI. The Hidden World of WWI reveals the artifacts, sculptures and evocative graffiti left behind by soldiers on both sides of the conflict. Landowners determined to preserve the past have zealously protected these undergroun­d treasures for decades.

Gusky found thousands of works of art, graffiti and inscriptio­ns by German, French, British, American, Canadian, Polish, Hungarian, Australian, New Zealand, Chinese, African and even New Zealand Maori soldiers, among others. He spent a total of six months exploring miles and miles of these undergroun­d spaces.

Gusky is strongly committed to preserve and protect these treasures in France. “I’m a man on a mission. I hope these images will change the way we think about WWI and that they will be protected for future generation­s. The Hidden World of WWI gives us a glimpse into the humanity of individual soldiers who refused to be silenced in the face of modern warfare. Men from both sides declared themselves as human beings who could think, feel, express and create, and who remind us today that they were here, that they once existed as living, breathing human beings.” Images from The Hidden World of WWI can be found at www.JeffGusky.com.

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