20 Ames Street, Bldg. E15-109 Atrium level
List Projects 34: Brittany Nelson presents a body of work that drifts between scientific inquiry and emotional projection, where technology becomes a vessel for longing and imagination. Nelson’s practice is rooted in photography, yet it consistently expands beyond the image, drawing from archives, literature, and cinematic language to probe how humans search for connection—both with one another and with the unknown.
Working with reimagined analog processes such as mordançage, bromoil, and tintype, Nelson treats photographic materials as unstable ground rather than fixed records. These techniques introduce erosion, residue, and chance, mirroring the imperfect ways memory and desire surface over time. Her interest in space exploration functions less as a celebration of technological triumph than as a metaphor for projection: the impulse to send signals outward in the hope of recognition, affirmation, or response.
The exhibition’s new photographs and moving-image work, filmed at the Green Bank Observatory in West Virginia, place viewers inside a landscape where scientific rigor coexists with emotional vulnerability. Home to one of the world’s largest radio telescopes and a center for SETI research, the observatory becomes, in Nelson’s hands, a charged psychological site. The telescope looms not only as an instrument scanning the cosmos, but as an object onto which expectations, obsessions, and disappointments are quietly mapped.
Nelson’s video work draws inspiration from Daphne du Maurier’s
Rebecca, weaving themes of absence, fixation, and idealization into its structure. Sound plays a crucial role: the persistent hum of liquid-helium pumps pulses like a mechanical heartbeat, grounding the work in bodily sensation. Visually, the piece shifts between restrained 35mm imagery and increasingly restless handheld movement, building tension through repetition and rupture. The telescope itself becomes a stand-in for a lost relationship, turning the scientific pursuit of contact into an intimate narrative of attachment and release.
In
List Projects 34, Brittany Nelson reframes the search for extraterrestrial intelligence as a reflection of human interiority. The exhibition suggests that looking outward—to space, to archives, to machines—is often a way of confronting the limits of perception, and of reckoning with the desires we project onto the vast, silent unknown.
Image:
Brittany Nelson, Green Bank Telescope, 2025. Gelatin silver print. Courtesy the artist and PATRON Gallery © Brittany Nelson