NEW YORK, NY.- I was doomscrolling social media late one nightcall it a ritual, call it a failure of willwhen I landed on a TikTok clip of astrophysicist Hakeem Oluseyi chatting with Neil deGrasse Tyson and comedian Paul Mecurio. In the video, Oluseyi explains the Andromeda paradox with casual brilliance: Imagine youre sitting still in a chair and someone runs past youat the precise moment you cross paths, you both look up at the Andromeda galaxy. Due to the relativity of simultaneity and the immense distance of Andromeda, you each perceive the galaxy as it existed on entirely different days, despite occupying nearly the same space and time. In a universe governed by Einsteins theory of special relativity, time is elastic, contingent, dependent on motion and perspective. There is no singular now. The further you stretch across space, the more the concept begins to unravel.
Dustin Yellin, The Consequential Nature of the Simultaneous, 2025. Glass, epoxy, collage, acrylic paint, 51.4 x 121.3 x 29.8 cm. 20 1/4 x 47 3/4 x 11 3/4 in. © Dustin Yellin. Photo: Martyna Szczesna. Courtesy of the Artist and Almine Rech.
As I tried to make sense of this cosmic and unsettling truth, I was reminded of Dustin Yellins workspecifically Politics of Eternity (2020), a 10,000-pound work composed of seven laminated glass panels that unfold as a sweeping triptych of civilizations mythic past, industrial present, and speculative future. Structured in mirrored acts, the piece moves from an ancient ritual scene to a futuristic orbital gathering, with a central tableau depicting the relentless march of modernity across a sea of tall ships and supertankers. As with much of Yellins practice, it resists chronology in favor of simultaneity, layering fragments of imagery and time into a fragile but vivid whole.
Dustin Yellin, Arcadia to Empire, 2025. Glass, epoxy, collage, acrylic paint, 27.3 x 63.8 x 24.1 cm. 10 3/4 x 25 1/8 x 9 1/2 in. © Dustin Yellin. Photo: Martyna Szczesna. Courtesy of the Artist and Almine Rech.
Yellins latest large-scale sculpture, The Consequential Nature of the Simultaneous (2025)which premieres in 'If a birds nest is nature, what is a house?', his first solo exhibition with Almine Rechcontinues and deepens this inquiry. Also structured around a mirrored narrative, the work juxtaposes a vision of alien astronauts assembling around a NASA spacecraft and a particle accelerator with a chaotic, speculative depiction of an ancient Etruscan scene. Suspended in layers of glass, these two poles suggest a continuity between ancient cosmology and scientific futurism, collapse and discovery. The sculpture reads as a time-bridgean architectural container for converging belief systems, cultural ruins, and space-age imaginaries. It captures Yellins signature method of embedding found materials, painted gestures, and cultural detritus into a stratified structure that invites contemplation of what it means to existsimultaneouslyacross epochs.
Dustin Yellin, Pliny the Younger, 2025. Glass, epoxy, acrylic, collage, 21 x 48.6 x 15.9 cm. 8 1/4 x 19 1/8 x 6 1/4 in. © Dustin Yellin. Photo: Martyna Szczesna. Courtesy of the Artist and Almine Rech.
This exhibition marks more than a return to the gallery; it signals a conceptual shift, or perhaps a rebalancing. At its core are five new glass-layered sculptures that build on Yellins foundational practice of compressing time, memory, and myth into vertical compositions. Yellin also presents a suite of three luminous, hallucinatory paintingssignaling his re- engagement with the medium after nearly twenty yearsthat vacillate between extraterrestrial geological forms and dreamlike mountain ranges, rendered in ecstatic, fluorescent hues. These imagined terrains are not so much landscapes as temporal palimpsestsportals into what geologists and theorists call deep time: the vast, incomprehensible expanse of Earths existence, theorized by James Hutton and popularized by John McPhee, that renders human chronology a flicker in the planets long memory.
Dustin Yellin, The Old Mimoid 2, 2025. Collage and acrylic paint on canvas, 91.4 x 91.4 x 5.1 cm - 36 x 36 x 2 in (unframed). 94.6 x 94.6 x 7.6 cm - 37 1/4 x 37 1/4 x 3 in (framed). © Dustin Yellin. Photo: Martyna Szczesna. Courtesy of the Artist and Almine Rech.
For Yellin, deep time is more than a backdropits a philosophy, an ethic, a psychic framework. His work, especially in sculpture, embodies this scale: Speculative and sedimentary, it articulates what Andrew Durbin in his 2015 essay Archive Fever calls a graveyard of consciousnessarchives of feeling and matter that defy temporal fixity. These works collapse linear time into stratified gesturesimages that behave like fossils of thoughts yet to fully form.
Durbin also described Yellins sculptural bodies as micro-Internets, networks of fragment and form that visualize not only the process of their own making but also the excess of life that resists annihilation. They hum with what Jacques Derrida might call archival ghostsimages and gestures layered into fragile cohesion, spectral in their silence but pulsing with presence. These are not narrative objects. They do not explain themselves. Instead, they pose the kinds of questions that recur in Yellins larger practice: What survives? What connects? What is the nature of presence across time?
Dustin Yellin. Ice Fossil, 2025. Collage and acrylic paint on canvas, 61 x 61 x 3.8 cm - 24 x 24 x 1 1/2 in (unframed) 61.3 x 61.3 x 3.8 cm - 24 1/8 x 24 1/8 x 1 1/2 in (framed).© Dustin Yellin. Photo: Martyna Szczesna. Courtesy of the Artist and Almine Rech.
And then theres the title: If a birds nest is nature, what is a house? The question, like much in Yellins work, is deceptively simple. A nest is made by instinct, a house by design. Yet both are precarious sheltersfragile architectures for survival. The nest may be natural, but the houselike the archiveis a container of chosen material, a structure that determines what is remembered, what is kept, what is made visible.
That tensionbetween instinct and intention, entropy and preservationruns throughout Yellins practice. His layered glass works, in which paint and found images are suspended in sheets like time held in stasis, offer a momentary stay against forgetting. Though the included paintings echo these ideas with painterly exuberance, it is the sculptures that most powerfully embody the artists ongoing effort to refract presence through deep, collective time.
Through it all, Yellins deep interdisciplinary fluency persists. He is not merely an artist but a builder of systemsof objects, of institutions, of communities. As the founder of Pioneer Works in Brooklyn, a multidisciplinary space for art and science, he has cultivated a living, breathing sculptural ecosystem populated by artists, scientists, musicians, historians, neighborsthe artists own social sculpture. Like his artworks, it is layered, porous, enmeshed.
With 'If a birds nest is nature, what is a house?', Yellin doesnt just returnhe reframes. The exhibition is a proposal for how to live in time differently, to see ourselves not at the center of history but entangled in its strata. In a moment defined by velocity and erasure, these works slow us down. They shimmer with possibility. They archive the ineffable.
And if you move close enough, you might even see yourselfreflected, refracted, pausedin their layered glass and radiant fragments.
Terence Trouillot, Senior Editor at frieze.