You might try glow-in-the-dark toys, paint, etc. IR photon quantum energy levels might be close enough for them to glow after being exposed to IR. Just a guess.
Otherwise, as nbucska mentions, there might be phospors that would work. This would be similar to a fluorescent light, which converts UV to visible.
Seems to met that in general, UV-->visible or visible-->IR would be easier than going the other way. If I remember correctly, the higher frequency photons have more energy than low freq. So for example with UV--> visible, you get a big electron jump in the phosphor when the UV hits it, and then multiple smaller jumps back when the electron collapses back into its normal state. The smaller reverse jumps are where you get the visible light. It would be harder to go the other way, to take low-energy photons and try to change them into hi-energy photons.
Please realize this is all guesswork based on what I remember from undergrad work about 15 years ago. . . .