Egor Rogalev was born in Leningrad (Saint Petersburg) in 1980. He has earned degree at the Department of Journalism at the Saint Petersburg state university. Egor mixes landscape photography with street portraiture exploring how people in post-Soviet countries correspond with transformation of urban and social environment.

Last February, photographer Egor Rogalev realised his childhood dream of visiting Kaluga’s space museum, an impressive repository of rockets, spacesuits and satellites. Officially named the Tsiolkovsky State Museum of the History of Cosmonautics, the museum, which opened in 1967, is dedicated to the history of Soviet space exploration.

Like so many other children growing up in Russia, Rogalev was drawn to the romanticism of Soviet space travel, an interest he nurtured through sci-fi films and books. According to Rogalev, the exhibition is divided into three parts: the first is dedicated to Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, a rocket scientist from Kaluga; the second displays replicas of the most famous Soviet spacecrafts; and the third is a rocket park outside of the museum.

“The museum and rocket park looked so melancholy in the snow,” he said. “But the exhibition, especially the Hall of Space Technology, was very impressive.

h/t: calvertjournal











































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