Mission to Nocterra

In 1977, NASA launched the Voyager space probe into the galaxy. 
In 2018, we got something back.

Welcome to Nocterra, a microcosm of an alien planet where the visible light spectrum does not exist. Experts have identified that each wall in this recovered spacecraft was intended to teach us something about the Nocterran way of life, but after months of slow progress, the Winslow Corporation is crowd-sourcing the public’s help to unlock these mysteries.

Every fifteen minutes, a new crew of research specialists is invited onboard the craft. After a brief light readjustment experience to prepare their eyes for complete darkness, each researcher will have the opportunity to try to solve the puzzles and make meaning out of the materials on her wall using the senses of touch, smell, and sound. Will they help the world understand what the Nocterrans are trying to tell us?

This experiential installation meets puzzle room is designed to be experienced in complete darkness. The Mission to Nocterra experience was created in collaboration with Matt Gesualdi, Dan Griner, Bailey Van Etten, Mara Maxwell, and Brice Sullivan in partnership with the Colorado Center for the Blind and Maker Faire Denver with support from Meow Wolf.

The process

Matt Gesualdi brought together the creative team with a rough sketch of the concept, which we subsequently collaboratively developed. To accomodate people’s different schedules and geographic locations, each person took primary responsibility for a single wall, each dedicated to a different aspect of the Nocterran’s world. Working in groups, participants needed to solve a puzzle on each wall in complete darkness.

In addition to leading the BIOSPHERES wall, I also developed the audio soundscape of the mission and a one-minute “light adjustment” experience for participants in the antechamber upon entry and exit to the structure, to ease their eyes to and from the pitch blackness. All collaborators assisted in the development of the overall concept and backstory and the “pre-theatre” experiences props, costumes, and performance