Imagine a situation like the one experienced by the protagonists of Interstellar, Christopher Nolan’s film set mostly in space and a future Earth. Briefly, one of the dynamics created in the film starring Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain and Michael Caine is that the astronauts after an expedition return from space having not followed the flow of solar time thus somehow traveling through time while retaining their original appearance. It creates a fascinating narrative in which it is poetic how the astronauts interact with what they had left behind at their departure.
Following the same suggestion, photographer Ken Hermann published his photo series “Crash Landed“, which chronicles the experience of an astronaut alone on a planet he no longer recognizes.


The Earth narrated by Ken Hermann is a post-apocalyptic landscape; there is no trace of humans left, except in the buildings and interiors, empty but standing still in time.
Only nature in this hypothetical future has managed to regain possession of the spaces, an important element in telling the meaning of the series, which wants precisely to delve into the role of humans and their responsibility to the environment in which they live. Loneliness is the other theme that stands out in the composition of the shots; the figure of the astronaut is stripped of any human interaction, as well as any humanity. The world no longer belongs to him, he himself is different and not human, the space suit with the round reflective helmet helps to restore a sense of diversity.








