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Printing :
Digital on Paper , Cardboard under glass
Framing :
Framed
Dimensions :
19.7x15.7in
About this artwork
Beacon of Liberation
This lighthouse stands at Ouistreham, where history turned on June 6, 1944, as British and French commandos stormed Sword Beach in the easternmost assault of D-Day. Built in 1905 on the Caen Canal, the 38-meter tower served as a crucial landmark for Allied forces navigating toward their landing zones that dawn. The red and white beacon that once guided peaceful merchant vessels and ferries to Portsmouth became a silent witness… to one of history's most pivotal moments - the only French commando unit, led by Commander Philippe Kieffer, fought alongside British forces to liberate their own soil. The lighthouse embodies the dual nature of coastal landmarks - peaceful guides in normal times, strategic markers during conflict.
Printed on museum-quality Canson Infinity Baryta Photo II 310g fiber paper and professionally framed in Nielsen Alpha matte black frames with white archival matting.
Yann Gourvennec is a Paris-based photographer and watercolorist whose Celtic heritage shapes his keen observations of urban life and landscapes. He treats his camera like a brush, composing images with a painter’s sensibility and favoring natural light, macro detail, and unposed moments in street and architectural photography. His style is documentary yet poetic, with subtle experimentation in perspective and composition. His artworks evoke a quiet urgency—inviting viewers to pause, ponder overlooked beauty, and reflect on memory, identity, and what we risk losing as our world changes.