Falklands War photography exhibition Everything Changed at Chatham Historic Dockyard
Published: 13:54, 05 April 2022
Updated: 14:03, 05 April 2022
A photography exhibition commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Falklands War has opened.
Everything Changed by photographer and journalist Graham Bound has launched today in Chatham on the exact day in 1982 that the British Government dispatched the first ships of the Royal Navy task force to engage with Argentine forces.
The collection of 40 photographs provides a rare record of Argentina’s invasion, the subsequent war, and its aftermath.
Graham, who was born in the Falklands, was 24 at the time and the editor of the Port Stanley newspaper but under occupation, publication ceased so he began recording what was going on in occupied Stanley.
For a few days, he was able to walk freely with his camera equipment but as the intensity of the conflict increased, he was forced to take photographs much more carefully, often from within buildings.
Almost 40-years later, Graham has worked with a photo gallery to digitise and restore the faded prints, and produce new ones from negatives that had previously never been printed.
He said: "Some of the images are not particularly pleasant to look at. Interesting, yes, but not enjoyable. Fortunately, the grimmest reality is hidden in the deep black shadow of the monochrome prints.
"But in some of the photos, light falls on the faces and the eyes of men and we gain a glimpse of their emotions: despair, pride, exhaustion, determination and fear.
"Some of my once written-off photos are now the most dramatic in the exhibition.
"I hope these photographs remind people of the dramatic and dangerous days of 1982."
The exhibition is on until June 14. Admission is included in an entry ticket to The Historic Dockyard Chatham.
The dockyard went on to have a direct role in the war, providing support to the Royal Navy and was also home to frigates poised to replace warships allocated to the Falklands task force
The museum is also hosting a digital display featuring voice recordings and focussing on the personal stories of those who experienced the conflict either on active service, or back home in Medway.
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Alex Langridge