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Photography:
Oriane Thomasson
Design:
Rob van Hoesel
Lithography:
Sebastiaan Hanekroot
Print:
Wilco Art Books
Atlantis is an eclectic collection of photographs taken by Oriane Thomasson (FR) across various landscapes, interwoven with archival images. Through these visual correspondences, she constructs a photographic fiction of the legend of Atlantis.
The myth of Atlantis, as recounted by Plato in Timaeus and Critias, describes a magnificent, vast, and prosperous island blessed with fertile land and abundant natural resources. Its inhabitants, descendants of Poseidon, lived in a society organised in harmony with nature. Over time, their ambition drove them to expand their empire and exploit new resources, provoking the wrath of Zeus. As punishment, he unleashed a devastating cataclysm that submerged the island beneath the waves. To this day, the myth continues to inspire archaeological theories and countless fictional narratives, and proves to be just as relevant today.
Through this free reinterpretation, Thomasson creates her own narrative, composed of a photographic series and an original science fiction short story titled ‘The Meteors’. Together they trace a before-and-after, the allure of a ‘lost paradise’ and the marks of its collapse, revealing how evidence and invention together shape the writing of history. The work bridges what is known and what is imagined – what remains and what is missing – and treats archaeology and history not as neutral repositories but as story-making practices whose documents become material for the book’s fiction.
Atlantis, just like Thomasson’s previous book Paradis, opens up a space for the imagination, where, from the shadow of submersion, new forms emerge. The series is built on cycles of disappearance and resurgence. Between the mysterious, unsettling world of the depths where Atlantis now belongs, and the enchanting images of this paradise of abundance. The book is printed on four different types of paper, each corresponding to a specific category of image: a warm-toned paper for images evoking the island of Atlantis and its classical Greek landscape; a thin, translucent paper referencing disappearance and oblivion, used for traces of a lost Atlantean culture; a bright white paper for images that convey a state of transition, from sinking landscapes to a man with a fish head; and a coated paper printed full-bleed for underwater imagery, to emphasise the submersion of the once-prosperous city.
Oriane Thomasson is a French artist based in Brussels. Her first photobook, Paradis, was published by The Eriskay Connection in August 2022. Paradis was showcased at international fairs such as Unseen Amsterdam, the New York Art Book Fair, the Tokyo Art Book Fair, and Polycopies. The book was awarded among the Best Dutch Book Designs 2022 and was shortlisted for the Author Book Award at the Rencontres d’Arles, before being exhibited at the festival in 2022. The Paradis series was exhibited at the gallery Chez Olivia as part of the Photo Brussels Festival in 2024. Her work was also shown at Contretype in 2019 as part of Propositions d’artistes, and again in 2024 during the Pop Up Flash Sales. Paradis is now sold out. Through her analog and digital photographic work, Oriane Thomasson explores themes of paradise and nature, integrating archival material and drawings into her practice. The materiality of images and their transmission allows her to reflect on our visual imagination and the way it is constructed. Atlantis was the subject of a research residency at ISELP in Brussels from January to April 2025. Part of the series has also been presented at ISELP in the form of an installation during the group exhibition Réminiscences, from April to June 2025. Oriane Thomasson studied at ERG (École de Recherche Graphique) and in 2019, upon completing her studies, she was awarded the Roger de Conynck Prize, which honors “a talented young photographer.”