CAMILLE BRITTON



CURATOR + RESEARCHER + ARTIST













ABOUT


Camille is a UK based curator, researcher, and artist who grew up in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in Colorado, USA. Her work centers around our relationships with nature, where they come from and how they are preserved over time and geographical space. She primarily works with natural history museums and agricultural spaces, with photography, film, sculpture, and writing. 

Camille holds an MFA in Arts and Humanities from the Royal College of Art and an MSc in Visual, Material, and Museum Anthropology from Oxford University. She works across disciplines, combining anthropological, historical, and artistic research methods applied to scientific subjects. She currently works at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History where she has contributed to the development and build of numerous exhibitions including Breaking Ground, The Art and Science of the Dodo, artist Angela Palmer’s The Deadly Six, Fly Over My City, Fair Water, and Connected Planet.

Camille is also a landworker on an organic market garden north of Oxford, UK and before that, a goat dairy and vegetable farm in Maine, USA.