A sculpture that weighs almost 11,000 pounds and stretches 11 feet long is about to fill the Bruce Museum's Sculpture Gallery. "Dustin Yellin: Politics of Eternity" opens Saturday, July 25.

The seven-part sculpture is built from glass, epoxy, collage, acrylic and steel, with thousands of hand-cut images and painted marks trapped between dozens of layered glass panes. Look closely, and you'll spot rare minerals, ancient artifacts, nuclear waste, rusting cars, jet packs, and even colonies on Mars.

Bruce Museum Executive Director and CEO Mary-Kate O'Hare said the work sits at a rare crossroads: "Few artists work at this intersection of art, science, and storytelling, and almost none at this scale. These are exactly the kinds of intersections the Bruce can bring alive."

This is the first national touring exhibition ever devoted to Yellin, a Brooklyn-based artist who also founded Pioneer Works, a Red Hook cultural center focused on experimentation across art, science, music and technology. Alongside the centerpiece sculpture, visitors will see collages, small glass studies and paintings spanning nearly a decade of his work, from 2017 to 2026.

The museum will show excerpts from "Goodnight, Lamby," a short film directed by Yellin and produced by Darren Aronofsky. An Official Selection at Cannes, it follows a three-year-old girl searching through one of Yellin's sculptures for her missing stuffed lamb, featuring the voices of Paul Rudd and Chris Rock, plus an original song by Maggie Rogers.

The exhibition runs through March 14, 2027, at the Bruce Museum, 1 Museum Drive, Greenwich, open Tuesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ticketing details are at brucemuseum.org.