You possibly can be forgiven for pondering that this dramatic picture is a nonetheless from a forthcoming science fiction epic, however it’s really the work of photographer Andrew McConnell, a part of his in-depth sequence Some Worlds Have Two Suns – and it is rather a lot of this planet.
McConnell started documenting the actions of Russian Soyuz rockets in 2015. Each three months, a spacecraft takes off from Baikonur Cosmodrome, a spaceport in Kazakhstan, carrying three astronauts and cosmonauts on a 6-hour journey to the Worldwide Area Station. At roughly the identical time, three area travellers come again to Earth, touchdown within the distant grasslands to Kazakhstan’s north-east.
This exceptional {photograph} from 2017 reveals Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin in entrance of the just-landed Soyuz MS spacecraft (US astronauts Peggy Whitson and Jack Fischer are nonetheless contained in the automobile).
McConnell says that “often at these landings, the helicopters would arrive first with all the engineers and support crew”, making it difficult to {photograph} freely. With this shot, he was in a position to “get into position before the helicopters came and kicked up the sandstorm”, and knew instantly it was a “special image… unlike any other landing I had seen”. It felt, he says, “otherworldly”.
Opening with Kulash Akhmetova’s poem Prayer – “I saw sandstorms – they wiped out the steppe settlement / I saw rockets – like visions, they hovered above me,” she writes, in a part of it – Some Worlds Have Two Suns is out on 4 October.
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