Royal British Veterans Enterprise aims to shift public perception in VE Day portrait campaign with Rankin
Pagefield Content Studio has launched a new campaign for veterans’ charity Royal British Veterans Enterprise (RBVE) to mark the 81st anniversary of VE Day, using a portrait series to connect a national symbol of service with the lived experiences of veterans today
The campaign launches alongside new research from Opinium, which highlights a generational gap in how military service is understood. Only 40% of the public correctly identify the ‘Tommy’ silhouette as representing all who serve or have served – falling to just 16% among Gen Z.
The work uses VE Day as a cultural moment to bridge that gap, reconnecting the legacy of the Second World War with the experiences of veterans across generations, and broadening perceptions of service beyond a narrow focus on WWII to reflect the diversity of veterans’ stories today.
Created in partnership with internationally renowned photographer Rankin, Still Serving reimagines the iconic ‘Tommy’ through a series of portraits of veterans aged 18 to 100. All veterans are supported by RBVE – a national charity that supports thousands of UK armed forces veterans with accommodation, jobs, and skills development.
Rankin said: “By bringing contemporary veterans into that frame, we’re able to show that service doesn’t end with history it continues today, in very real and personal ways. These are portraits about identity, resilience, and the reality of modern service.”
Each portrait uses a distinctive visual device to transform the subject’s shadow into the ‘Tommy’ silhouette, the symbol representing everyone who has served or is still serving across the British Armed Forces. The campaign features nine veterans, from 18-year-old Holly Stroud to 100-year-old Percy Bowpitt, who was still serving in Burma with the ‘Forgotten Army’ when VE Day was declared. Each portrait is accompanied by a personal story, offering insight into life during and after service.
Shot at RBVE’s Village in Aylesford, Kent, the campaign captures the original ‘Tommy’ shadow before integrating it into each portrait in post-production. Alongside a national PR and social campaign, the work will appear on digital billboards across town and city centre locations in the North East over the VE Day weekend.
Oliver Wilson, creative director at Pagefield, said: “VE Day offered a powerful opportunity to build recognition of RBVE’s new brand, connect it to a moment of national relevance and the people RBVE supports every day – linking the ‘Tommy’ symbol with what service looks like today.
He added: “From there, we developed a simple creative idea: use the silhouette itself to reconnect the symbol with the people behind it. By transforming each veteran’s shadow into ‘Tommy’, we created a visual link between generations of service that could work across both media and public spaces."