Daria Garnik: Gagarin

The triumphal and tragically broken life of Yuri Gagarin – the first human to journey into outer space – made him the cult hero of the Soviet mythology and the central figure of scientific and atheistic propaganda of the USSR.

Space exploration was one of the priority directions of domestic policy of the Soviet Union and the subject of rivalry with the United States in the Cold War. Rapid development of science and achievements in the Space Race gave citizens of the Soviet Union the sense of pride and greatness, feeling of omnipotence. The figure of Gagarin who was born in an ordinary family from the Russian outback became conclusive evidence that “everything is possible”. The transpersonal nature of consciousness of Soviet people allowed every resident of the country to associate himself with the smiling person in the cosmonaut’s helmet and to attribute himself the cosmonaut’s achievements.

Immediately after Gagarin’s historic flight, his hometown of Gzhatsk opened a museum in his honor, and a month later after cosmonaut’s death Gzhatsk was renamed Gagarin. Intertwining of life story of Gagarin as a human with the atmosphere and urbanistic memory of Gagarin city gives a surrealistic raid of the stiffened time and nostalgia to this place.

Gagarin © Daria Garnik

Daria Garnik was born in 1986 in Ekaterinburg, Russia. In 2009 she graduated from the Ural State University with a bachelor’s degree in Art Criticism. In 2016 she became a student of Documentary Photography and Photojournalism School in Saint-Petersburg. In her works she is interested in the phenomenon of human memory and memory of the surrounding landscape. Daria has been working as a freelance photographer since 2013. Currently she is based in Ekaterinburg, Russia.

Gagarin © Daria Garnik
Gagarin © Daria Garnik
Gagarin © Daria Garnik
Gagarin © Daria Garnik
Gagarin © Daria Garnik
Gagarin © Daria Garnik
Gagarin © Daria Garnik
Gagarin © Daria Garnik
Gagarin © Daria Garnik

Comments

comments