Press Release
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International ongoing exhibitions
Unfolding over three floors, the exhibition Midnight Zone engages with underwater ecologies, from the influential local presence of the Rhine to distant oceans, exploring the complexity of water as an elemental medium affected by anthropogenic degradation. Reflecting upon its flow and materiality, profundity and politics, its mundane and sacral dimensions, the solo show acts as a kaleidoscope, inviting us to dive deep.
“Water is not a landscape—it is the condition of all life, the first skin of the Earth, the medium of our becoming.” —Julian Charrière
In Midnight Zone, Julian Charrière invites visitors to think and feel with water: as atmosphere, memory, movement and kin. Drifting between deep-
Midnight Zone brings together a series of elemental investigations—earlier works alongside major new commissions that trace Charrière’s long-
In the eponymous film Midnight Zone (2025), a lighthouse Fresnel lens—a device meant to guide from a distance—is inverted and lowered into the abyss. Shot using a remotely operated deep-
Light here does not reveal; it fractures. The work hovers between dreams, illuminating the blind spots in our pursuit of progress.
In Albedo (2025), filmed beneath the arctic ocean between icebergs, the gaze shifts again. This time, the viewer follows water as it slips between solid, liquid, and vapor—a choreography of phase change unfolds in real time. Rather than rendering melting as catastrophe, the film resists the sublime, offering a study in flux, in atmospheres and absences. It reveals the sea as a kind of thought: unbounded, destabilizing and impossible to contain. The camera floats, reframes, releases. There are no fixed perspectives—only drift, suspension, dispersal.
These two film works anchor the exhibition that unfolds like a hydrological system—moving between material states, spatial logics and emotional registers. Set against the backdrop of Basel and its riverine histories, Midnight Zone is attuned to the political and infrastructural presence of water. As a link between glaciers and oceans, the Rhine runs quietly beneath the museum—both a vector of trade and a climate-
Sound, too, moves like a current throughout the exhibition—subtle, immersive and subaqueous—shaping a synesthetic experience that invites the visitor not only to look, but to listen, to feel, and to attune to another mode of sensing: one closer to being at rest, suspended, as if underwater.
Spanning film, sculpture, photography and installation, Charrière’s multidisciplinary practice is marked by immersive projects grounded in fieldwork within ecologically and symbolically charged sites—glaciers, volcanoes, nuclear test zones and deep-
Fusing scientific observation with speculative poetics, his works foreground landscapes as physical processes, repositories of memory and vessels of cultural imagination. Rather than illustrating environmental crises directly, Charrière creates spaces where wonder and disquiet coexist, allowing viewers to experience the contradictions and tensions of our contemporary condition. His practice probes the colonial and extractivist legacies embedded within acts of exploration, landscape representation and the technologies of seeing.
In the exhibition, the artist’s works aim to offer a sensuous mode of knowing, of dwelling within the liquid conditions of our planet. Here, water is not considered as a stage for human drama but as a protagonist. It is regarded as an archive, mirror, solvent and signal that holds the memory of glaciers and the minerals of tomorrow. He wants to show how it binds our breath to the biosphere and reveals the fragility of a world shaped by evaporation, melt and sedimentation.
The show reminds us that the ocean is not the opposite of land, but its precondition. Humankind is suspended in its flows—biologically, historically and imaginatively.
In the works shown in Basel, Charrière does not want to show us the sea. He intends to let it speak, pulse and breathe through image, sound and elemental choreography. The result is not representation but resonance: a state of atmospheric intimacy, an invitation to see through its currents.
Exhibition 11 June -
Julian Charrière, Midnight Zone—85 Fathoms, 2024. © 2025 ProLitteris, Zürich and the artist
© ArtCatalyse International / Marika Prévosto 2025 All Rights Reserved