THE TRIENNIAL 2025

Julian Charrière

Calls for Action, 2024 - ongoing

Employing video, sculpture, and photography, Julian Charrière evokes a profound reflection on humanity’s relationship with the natural world. His projects often stem from remote fieldwork in liminal or discarded locations, such as volcanoes, icefields, radioactive sites, and jungles, shedding light on urgent environmental concerns. Calls for Action is a collaborative effort with Art into Acres, Re:wild, the Brazilian Ministry of Indigenous Peoples, the National Foundation for Indigenous Peoples, and regional conservation organizations. The work connects the rich biodiversity of a primordial rainforest in South America with the city of Boston, offering a window into a fragile ecosystem. A 24-hour live-streamed video feed from the Brazilian rainforest, enhanced with infrared technology after dark, reveals this threatened landscape. A speaker positioned within the forest invites visitors to call from their phones, sending their voices into the wild, where they echo back in return, bridging the distance. Calls for Action encourages us to reflect on our bond with nature, even when its presence feels distant.

Tuesday - Sunday
11am - 7pm

Triennial Hub at Lyrik
400 Newbury St.
Boston, MA 02215

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Julian Charrière

b. 1987, based in Berlin

Julian Charrière is a French-Swiss artist based in Berlin. A seminal voice in Contemporary Art today, Charrière has been widely exhibited across esteemed institutions and museums around the globe. Marshalling performance, sculpture and photography, his projects often stem from remote fieldwork in liminal or discarded locations, such as volcanoes, icefields and radioactive sites. By encountering places where acute geophysical identities have formed, Charrière speculates on alternative histories, often looking at materials through the lens of deep geological time. Exploring how our ideas of nature have changed, from the Romantic movement into the Anthropocene, his projects deconstruct the cultural traditions which govern how we perceive and represent the natural world. A former student of Olafur Eliasson’s Institute for Spatial Experiments, Charrière frequently collaborates with scientists, engineers, art historians and philosophers. Whether undertaking artistic expeditions or staging immersive installations, the core of his practice concerns itself with how the human being inhabits the world, and how it in turn inhabits us.

His work has been the subject of solo presentations at major international institutions, among them LagoAlgo, Mexico City (2024); SFMOMA, San Francisco (2022); Langen Foundation, Neuss (2022); Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas (2021); MAMbo, Bologna (2019); Berlinische Galerie, Berlin (2018); Parasol Unit Foundation, London (2015); Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne (2014); and Centre Culturel Suisse, Paris (2014). Charrière has also been prominently featured at the 59th Biennale di Venezia (2022); 57th Biennale di Venezia (2017); the Antarctic Biennale (2017); the Taipei Biennial (2018); the 12th and 16th Biennale de Lyon (2013, 2022); Centre Pompidou, Paris (2019); Sprengel Museum, Hannover (2019); Aarhus Kunstmuseum, Aarhus (2019); SCHIRN Kunsthalle, Frankfurt (2018); Hayward Gallery, Southbank Centre, London (2018); and Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2017). A nominee of the Prix Marcel Duchamp in 2021, Charrière in 2022 received the 14th SAM Prize for Contemporary Art.