A photographer takes a photo of Anna and me at Marwencol Falls, where we spent our honeymoon.
A photographer takes a photo of Anna and me at Marwencol Falls, where we spent our honeymoon. © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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Rescuing the Major – the 2004 photo that won the Ultimate Soldier contest © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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The 1942-43 New Year’s Eve Party in the Ruined Stocking Catfight Club in Marwencol, Belgium. © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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Five SS soldiers sneak up and attack me, punching and kicking at my head © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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My friend Jeff helps his wife, Chris, down a bump in the path. They’re on their way back from a photo shoot at Marwencol Falls. © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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A soldier is killed during a New Year’s patrol of Marwencol © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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A photographer takes a photo of Anna and me at Marwencol Falls, where we spent our honeymoon. © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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A Nazi bike messenger blows through Marwencol’s guard gate © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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A soldier pays his respects to his buddy in Marwencol’s cemetery © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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T. C. and I are sitting drinking real coffee under our shelter made of bodies during the worst snowstorm in Belgian history. The real T. C. died before this was taken, but he lives on in Marwencol. © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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Lt. Tonjes takes a break from sweeping Marwencol’s gas station to talk with Mailman © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
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Hogie receives new figures for his miniature World War II town in the mail © Mark Hogancamp / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY

Mark Hogancamp leads a double life. In Marwencol, Hogancamp is a WWII fighter pilot, an owner of a successful bar and married to a beautiful woman named Anna. He also happens to be only 12 inches high and made of plastic. In Kingston, New York—the real world—Hogancamp lives alone in a crowded trailer, devoting much of his time to building, photographing and documenting the lives of those in Marwencol—a fictitious world of Hogancamp’s creation.

Welcome to Marwencol, out next month through Princeton Architectural Press, examines this meticulously-crafted world that Hogancamp has been building and photographing for over a decade—a way to cope with his brain injuries and PTSD. Hogancamp’s photography has been featured in the Esopus art journal, was the subject of an award-winning 2010 documentary called Marwencol and a feature-length film, that will star Steve Carell, is currently in the works. But for Hogancamp, creating the world of Marwencol was simply a form of therapy. It was a way to keep his mind occupied once his state-supported aid ran out.

“I didn’t know that my fight to get my mind back would benefit other brain-injured people,” Hogancamp told the New York Times in an interview earlier this year.

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Mark working in Marwencol in 2005 Photo by Tom Putnam

Fifteen years ago as Hogancamp was leaving a bar in Kingston, NY he was brutally attacked by five men and left for dead. He was out cold the minute his head hit the pavement, but that didn’t stop the five assailants from kicking his legs, stomping his chest and face, and smashing in his right eye. Apparently earlier in the evening, while sharing a drink at the bar with one of the men, Hogancamp had revealed that he was a cross-dresser. The attack lasted less than a minute, but changed Hogancamp’s life forever.

When Hogancamp awoke from a nine-day coma, he had zero memories of his previous adult life. He had to slowly relearn how to eat, walk and write. Two years after the attack he began working on 12-inch military figures and the town of Marwencol was slowly born. He collected characters and built places for them to hang out. Working on the dolls improved his dexterity and his patience. The characters of Marwencol began to resemble the people he had known prior to the attack and story lines started to mirror events that had happened in Hogancamp’s life. Eventually he started documenting every day life in his town with an old 35mm Pentax point and shoot.

Welcome to Marwencol takes a behind-the-scenes look at the life and work of this outsider-artist. The book is divided into three sections: Hogancamp’s life before the attack and the first few years after, an in-depth look at the making-of Marwencol and the back stories of its characters, and finally an 100 page graphic novel featuring stories set in Marwencol. It is a comprehensive look at the profound healing properties that photography can have on the mind.

“It’s good hearing from people who have been helped by my story, by my town,” says Hogancamp. “That’s why I did all this—the art show, the documentary, the book. ‘For duty and humanity.’”

Welcome to Marwencol will be published by Princeton Architectural Press this November. The book can be pre-ordered now directly through Mark Hogancamp’s website.