Meteor Ghosts
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Dates2024 - 2026
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Author
- Location Jura, France
Meteor Ghosts unearths a 1954 UFO case in the Jura. Through archives and atmospheric images, it builds a visual enigma where the lines between testimony and illusion quietly dissolve in the landscape.
« With the benefit of hindsight, I think I went through an interesting experience. One of the lessons is seeing how information can be distorted. What sometimes makes me skeptical about what I read and see is how, from absolutely nothing, a legend can be created. »
Raymond Romand, 1991, about the UFO case in Prémanon during the autumn of 1954.
Meteor Ghosts explores the shifting boundary between reality, memory, and myth. The project draws from the wave of UFO sightings that swept across France in 1954, particularly along the French-Swiss border region in the Jura Mountains. Newspapers at the time reported strange lights, apparitions, and mysterious encounters that often left behind little more than fear and speculation.
One of the most emblematic stories comes from the small village of Prémanon, where four children, including Raymond Romand, claimed to have witnessed a glowing object landing near their home. At that time, Romand described it as a “large sugar cube on three legs,” emitting a paralyzing cold. Though traces were reportedly found on the ground, the story was later revealed to have originated as a school assignment—an essay their teacher had asked them to write. Yet by the time this was known, the tale had already entered local folklore.
This case attracted considerable media attention at the time, eventually reaching the United States and taking on the proportions of a Hollywood action film. As more articles appeared, the story grew increasingly sensational: the ghost the children claimed to have seen gradually transformed into a flying saucer, then into an alien with whom they supposedly fought in front of the farmhouse.
By returning to these landscapes where I grew up—the misty forests, abandoned villages, and quiet Jura Mountains—I create a photographic narrative where truth wavers and past stories linger. With each return, a ghostly landscape emerges, scattered with increasingly faint traces of human presence. Using archival materials, re-enactments, and documentary images, I blur the line between facts and fiction. Meteor Ghosts invites the viewer to navigate the fragile terrain of perception and to question what lies beyond the visible.