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The images of U.S. Veterans on the VA.gov homepage are part of the Veterans Portrait Project, which honors Veterans through photography.
The Veterans Portrait Project was started by retired Air Force Staff Sergeant and Aerial Combat Photojournalist Stacy Pearsall as a means of honoring her fellow Veterans.
Pearsall has photographed more than 7,500 Veterans so far, and hopes to capture portraits of Veterans in every state and province the U.S. Department of Defense recruits from. She got the
idea for the project after being injured in combat. “After spending hours in VA waiting rooms surrounded by Veterans from every generation and branch of service,” she says, “I was compelled
to honor and thank them in the only way I know how: photography.”
Learn more about the Veterans featured on VA.govLearn more about Stacy Pearsall, founder of the Veterans Portrait Project
VA.gov currently features Pearsall’s images of these Veterans:
Stacy L. Pearsall got her start as an Air Force photographer at age 17. During her time in service, she traveled to over 41 countries and attended the Military Photojournalism Program at
S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. During 3 combat tours, she earned the Bronze Star Medal and Air Force Commendation with Valor for combat actions in
Iraq.
Though combat disabled and retired from military service, Pearsall continues to work around the world. With her service animal, America’s VetDogs Charlie, by her side, she works as an
independent photographer represented by Aurora Photos. Her photographs have been exhibited at the Woodruff Arts Center, the Pentagon, the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, the National
Veterans Memorial and Museum, and many other galleries and venues. In addition to her photography, Pearsall is also an author, educator, military consultant, BRAVO748 public speaker, and
founder of the Veterans Portrait Project. She also serves as a Nikon and Manfrotto Ambassador and Ilford Master.
Pearsall is one of only 2 women to win the National Press Photographers Association’s (NPPA) Military Photographer of the Year competition, and is the only woman to have won it twice. Her
additional honors include the Hill Vets 100 award, the Daughters of the American Revolution Margaret Cochran Corbin award, the White House’s Champion of Change designation, and an honorary
doctorate degree from The Citadel. Pearsall has served as a nominating juror for the Pulitzer Prize and as a presidential-appointed board member for the NPPA.
Pearsall started the Photo District News (PDN) “Personal Project” award-winning Veterans Portrait Project series in 2008 while she rehabilitated from combat injuries sustained in Iraq.
Spending hours in VA waiting rooms surrounded by Veterans from every generation and branch of service, she felt compelled to honor and thank them in the only way she knows how: through
photography. Since then she has documented roughly 7,500 Veterans in over 125 engagements.
Between her photography, teaching, and speaking engagements, Pearsall completed her first photography book, “Shooter: Combat from Behind the Camera.” The book received worldwide praise and
was hailed as “a book of the highest levels in the annals of combat journalism.” Her second book, “A Photojournalist’s Field Guide: In the Trenches with Combat Photographer Stacy Pearsall,”
was called “a must have for every aspiring photographer,” with critics noting that “even pros can pick up a few new tricks to help them become better photographers.”
Learn more about Pearsall and the Veterans Portrait Project:
Note: The Department of Veterans Affairs provides links to these external sites because they may contain information of interest to you. These links do not constitute an endorsement by VA of
any information, products, or services on these external sites.
Visit Pearsall’s websiteVisit the Veterans Portrait Project website