Atlante

Curated by James Lingwood

3 Feb - 2 May 2026

 

Works by: Igshaan Adams, Teju Cole, Luigi Ghirri, Emma McNally, Claudio Parmiggiani, Anri Sala, Tatiana Trouvé and Akram Zaatari

 

Private view: Saturday 31 January, 12–6pm

 

Thomas Dane Gallery

Via Francesco Crispi, 69

Napoli

 

Thomas Dane Gallery in Naples is pleased to present Atlante, an exhibition curated by James Lingwood.

 

In 1968, Claudio Parmiggiani made a group of works with maps and globes. He painted the shapes of continents onto the sides of cows, squeezed an inflatable globe into a glass jar, and photographed another, deflated, for a portfolio titled Atlante (1970).

 

The photographs for Parmiggiani’s work were taken by another young Italian artist, Luigi Ghirri. Three years later, Ghirri took photographs from pages of his own atlas for an important work of his own, which he also called Atlante (1973). The photographs of oceans, islands, deserts and mountains are so close-up that the images become unmoored from conventional cartography and drift away from representation towards reverie.

 

Akram Zaatari also takes the diagrammatic map as a starting point, in his case the Mediterranean, for his series of paintings YM (2024–25). He foregrounds the fluid space of the sea, rather than the fixed entity of the land, as the site for the movement and exchange of people, goods, and ideas. The wooden tondos in Zaatari’s Mediterranean Ruins series (2024 – ongoing), similarly evoke maps of cities and territories around the Mediterranean.

 

In his series Maps/Species (2014 – ongoing), Anri Sala brings together engravings of fish and other sea creatures from 18th and 19th century natural history books with his own ink and pastel drawings of nation states. In the drawings, Sala distorts the familiar contours of countries, their borders defined both by coastal geography and imperial power. Their ‘unnatural’ shapes mimic the descriptions of sea creatures, contorted to fit into the rectangle of the print.

 

The movement from conventional cartography to a more singular kind of mapping finds a compelling form in Igshaan Adams’s large-scale woven works. Adamsuses Google Maps satellite views to chart the ‘desire lines’ of the inhabitants of townships in Cape Town as they move through contested public space. In a large new tapestry Keeping Light (2025), the fixed coordinates of a map are transformed into fluid evocations of memory, and a cluster of floating ‘clouds’ woven with gold wire accentuates the sensation of movement and drift.

 

In her Choral Fields series, Emma McNally charts movement of various kinds—tectonic, oceanic, sonic, atomic—in large-scale graphite drawings. She overlays a range of marks, lines, some diagrammatic, others more fugitive, to build a swirling cartography that exceeds conventional forms of mapping to chart the turbulent geo-political weather of the present.

 

The co-ordinates of Tatiana Trouvé’s drawings similarly map not so much a place as a journey back and forth between interior and exterior worlds. In three new drawings from her series Les Dessouvenus (2025–26)—the word refers to a Breton term for the ‘unremembered’—Trouvé draws on shifting abstract shapes formed by the action of bleach poured on to coloured paper to build imaginary worlds that are as vivid, and as elusive, as dreams.

 

In the series Light Sleeper (2019–2025), Teju Cole draws out the information latent in the erased blackboards of the classrooms in which he teaches at Harvard. The resulting large-scale photographs, in which scratches, stains and fugitive chalkmarks hint at the grids and starfields of celestial maps, raise questions about who speaks and who is silenced in an increasingly turbulent world; a turbulence charted by each contemporary artist in Atlante, just as it was by Claudio Parmiggiani and Luigi Ghirri in their works from the early 1970s after which this exhibition is named.

 

Participating artists:

 

Igshaan Adams (b. 1982, Cape Town, South Africa)

Teju Cole (b. 1975, Kalamazoo MI)

Luigi Ghirri (b. 1943, Scandiano, Italy, d. 1992, Roncocesi, Italy)

Emma McNally (b. 1969, Essex, England)

Claudio Parmiggiani (b. 1943, Luzzara, Italy)

Anri Sala (b. 1974, Tirana, Albania)

Tatiana Trouvé (b. 1968, Cosenza, Italy)

Akram Zaatari (b. 1966, Saida, Lebanon)

 

James Lingwood is a curator, producer and writer based in London.

 

Lingwood was Curator of Exhibitions at the ICA, London from 1986–90, and Co-Director of Artangel together with Michael Morris from 1991–2022, together producing around 150 new projects by artists including Francis Alys, Matthew Barney, Yto Barrada, Jeremy Deller, Robert Gober, Roni Horn, Cristina Iglesias, Ilya Kabakov, Sejla Kameric & Anri Sala, Mike Kelley, Michael Landy, Steve McQueen, Gabriel Orozco, Elizabeth Price and Rachel Whiteread

 

In recent years Lingwood has curated exhibitions including Richard Hamilton: Serial Obsessions at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Seoul, South Korea (2017–18); Luigi Ghirri: The Map and The Territory; Photographs from the 1970s at Folkwang Museum, Essen, Germany; Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid, Spain; Jeu de Paume, Paris, France (2018–19); Luigi Ghirri: Viaggi at MASI, Lugano, Italy (2024); Tatiana Trouvé: The Strange Life of Things (with Caroline Bourgeois) at Palazzo Grassi, Venice, Italy (2025); Vija Celmins (with Theodora Vischer) at Fondation Beyeler, Basel, Switzerland (2025) and Cristina Iglesias: Passages at Fundacion La Pedrera, Barcelona, Spain (2025).

Claudio Parmiggiani, Globo, 1968. Courtesy Archivio Claudio Parmiggiani and Bortolami Gallery

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2 Oct – 15 Dec 2024 Drawing Room London