Julian Charrière
Calls for Action

Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Photo Alcuin Stevenson

View Livesteams:
callsforaction.net

Calls for Action marks a bold new direction by French-Swiss artist Julian Charrière, who in a series of participatory interventions bridges the world of contemporary art with large-scale forest conservation. Consisting of two-way livestreams between cultural institutions and endangered natural landscapes, Calls for Action stages an encounter beyond mere spectatorship where through the act of listening and speaking into the forest, we can also speak out on its behalf.

Behind the scenes in Western Andean Cloud Forest, Ecuador

Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Photo Alcuin Stevenson
Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Photo Alcuin Stevenson

Calls for Action is both a playful and critical intervention, showing the importance of emotional connection to environmental action. Though Earth’s primordial forests act as important carbon sinks and home to vibrant biodiverse communities of life, few people have had the opportunity to experience them first-hand. I wanted to create an opportunity for the public to intimately engage with endangered ecosystems and to hear their own voices within them. It is a reminder that our presence is felt even in places we imagine are remote.

Julian Charrière

Each iteration is unique and site-specific, responding to the history and ecology of the distinct locations it brings together. A permanent feature of the artwork is the presence of a telephone, through which a dialogue can be established between city and forest. In the latter, omnidirectional microphones are installed to capture local soundscapes, while a small speaker projects speech from the museum visitors. In order to not disturb wildlife, the sound is set below human speech levels, matching that of birdsong. Through this interaction, the public is invited to a both playful and radical intervention, becoming both participants and protectors that can lend their voices to some of Earth’s most endangered environments.

Behind the scenes in Western Andean Cloud Forest, Ecuador

Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Photo Alcuin Stevenson
Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Photo Alcuin Stevenson

Calls for Action is realised in partnership with internationally renowned conservation organisations Art into Acres and Re:wild, and in local collaboration with the Ecuadorian non-profit Fundación Jocotoco, in order to ensure its efforts are undertaken within an environmental and ethical framework. It marks the beginning of a long-term commitment to supporting the permanent conservation of threatened ecosystems, showing how art can be a tool for foregrounding issues of urgent ecological concern, from deforestation to environmental stewardship and sustainable forest management. Representing this need for a renewed planetary kinship, the artwork also presents an opportunity for the public to directly support the conservation of the forests featured in the artwork.

Join the CALLS FOR ACTION here!

Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Photo Alcuin Stevenson
Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

The first iterations of Calls for Action are set in Ecuador and focus on regions ranked as so-called key biodiversity hotspots. These are sites which while having lost more than 70% of their primary vegetation, are host to thousands of unique species, many of them endemic and endangered, occurring nowhere else on Earth. Representing some of the wettest areas in the world, the sites are habitat to Great Green Macaws, Brown-headed Spider Monkeys, Black-breasted Pufflegs, White-lipped Peccaries, Harpy Eagles, Banded Ground Cuckoos, Geoffroy’s Tamarins, Tapirs, and Pumas, among many others. Beyond being home to a rich variety of animals and plants, coastal and cloud forests of this nature also play an integral role in sequestering carbon and maintaining a stable hydrological cycle, thus enacting a vital purpose in the natural mitigation of climate change.

Everything is connected, and there is no place that does not feel the consequences of human action, as well as inaction. Calls for Action is an encounter with this reality, but also with the possibility that if we act with intention, if we put our voices together, we can support and regrow what which might otherwise have been silently lost.

Julian Charrière

Installation View, Globus Public Art Project, Basel, Switzerland, 2024

Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Photo Mark Niedermann

Exhibitions

Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Photo Mark Niedermann

Calls for Action
June 8th – November 6th, 2024
Globus, Marktplatz, Basel


Fondation Beyeler and Globus partner with Julian Charrière for the first iteration of Calls for Action, opening a live feed between Basel, Switzerland and a Western Andean Cloud Forest in Ecuador. Presented as the second iteration of the ‘Globus Public Art Project’ the live feed is screened in large on the facade of the iconic department store, a site which throughout an ongoing three-year renovation plan is commissioning temporary public artworks. In this version of Calls for Action, a phone booth has been installed on the marketplace below the screen, wherein visitors can both listen to and speak with an ecosystem from which we are not only physically but at times emotionally disengaged from. The “Globus Public Art Project” is curated by Samuel Leuenberger and is on view from 8 June until 6 November 2024.

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I Feel the Earth Whisper
June 15th – November 3rd, 2024
Museum Frieder Burda


In the second iteration of Calls for Action Julian Charrière joins forces with Museum Frieder Burda in Baden-Baden, Germany, restaging the work as an immersive and participatory experience inside of the gallery. Bringing together the institution, located in the mythical Black Forest wilderness with a Coastal Forest in Ecuador, Calls for Action is on view as part of the museum’s 20th anniversary exhibition ‘I Feel the Earth Whisper’ alongside Bianca Bondi, Sam Falls and Ernesto Neto. Curated by Patricia Kamp and Jérôme Sans, it is on display from 14 June until 3 November 2024.

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Project Partners

ART INTO ACRES is an artist-founded, non-profit initiative that supports large-scale land conservation with a focus on biodiversity and Indigenous Peoples-led efforts. Alongside the support of artists, galleries and institutions, and in collaboration with matching fund partners, Art into Acres has supported the permanent conservation of millions of hectares of tropical and boreal forest to date. Projects are locally-led and based on community-voiced interests.

arttoacres.org

RE:WILD is a global organization supporting environmental causes around the world. Founded by a group of renowned conservation scientists together with Leonardo DiCaprio and combining more than 35 years of conservation impact, Re:wild is a force multiplier that brings together Indigenous peoples, local communities, influential leaders, nongovernmental organizations, governments, companies, and the public to protect and rewild at the scale and speed we need.

rewild.org

FUNDACIÓN JOCOTOCO protects irreplaceable regions that are essential to maintain life on earth owing to their uniqueness and high concentration of biodiversity. On just 40,000 ha, Jocotoco protects 11% of all bird species in the world. Dozens of plants, reptiles, and amphibians have found their sole refuge in Jocotoco’s reserves, occurring nowhere else. Jocotoco treasures its deep connection to nature. What makes Jocotoco different from other organizations are the ‘boots on the ground,’ 80% of its 124 staff live around the reserves.

jocotoco.org.ec

Copyright the artist; VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Photo Alcuin Stevenson

About Julian Charrière

Julian Charrière’s (*1987) work blends conceptual explorations and poetic archaeology through performances, photographs, and installations.

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