CAMBRIDGE, MASS.- Brittany Nelsons practice moves between the speculative frontiers of science and science fiction to surface hidden histories, emotional residues, and institutional artifacts.
Trained as a photographer, Nelson often reimagines analog chemical techniques, such as mordançage, bromoil, and tintype, while drawing on extensive archival research. The imagery and language of space exploration have been touchstones for Nelson as she considers how contactwhether human or extraterrestrialis pursued, imagined, or idealized. In recent projects, Nelson draws out the psychological dimensions of science fiction and literature, where projection operates not only as imagining speculative futures but also as idealization or infatuationmeans of externalizing memory, desire, estrangement, and longing.
Nelsons upcoming List Projects exhibition debuts new photographs and a moving-image work filmed at the Green Bank Observatory (National Radio Astronomy Observatory) in West Virginiaa site where, in the artists hands, scientific inquiry and emotional projection converge. Home to one of the worlds largest radio telescopes, the site is a hub for SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) researchers who scan the cosmos for technosignaturessignals of extraterrestrial intelligenceusing radio waves, telescopes, and other specialized instruments.
Nelsons new work is also deeply shaped by literary and cinematic references, particularly Daphne du Mauriers 1938 novel Rebecca, in which a young woman develops an obsession with her husbands late first wife. Like the noveland Alfred Hitchcocks 1940 film adaptationNelsons video work plays with intimacy and distance, presence and absence. Its soundtrack incorporates the high-pitched hum of the telescopes liquid-helium pumps, which throb like mechanical heartbeats. Visually, it alternates quiet 35mm photographs shot from the Observatorys telescope with increasingly frenzied handheld sequences; at times, the camera appears to be hurled in frustration toward the massive structure. As the pace escalates, so does the emotional charge, producing a tension mired in obsession, longing, and rupture. Nelson has likened the telescope to an ex-girlfriend, and the piece unfolds as a kind of breakup narrativeat once intimate and expansive. Drawing from the spectral atmosphere of Rebecca, the work frames the search for contact not only as a scientific endeavor but also as a mirror of the self and the limits of perception and human understanding.
List Projects 34: Brittany Nelson is organized by Natalie Bell, Chief Curator with Marina Caron, Assistant Curator.
Brittany Nelson (b. 1984, Great Falls, MT) is an artist based in New York City. She studied at Montana State University and Cranbrook Academy of Art and is an Associate Professor of Photography at the University of Richmond. Her work has been exhibited at KIASMA, Helsinki; Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm; Le CAP - Centre dart, Saint Fons, France; Fotogalleriet, Oslo; Trondheim Kunstmuseum, Norway; the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit; and Brooklyn Academy of Music; among others. She has been an artist-in-residence at the Headlands Center for the Arts and the SETI Institute, both in California.