• Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok Presents SKIRUA’s Hell of Love,a Solo Exhibition by Skirua

    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok Presents SKIRUA’s Hell of Love,a Solo Exhibition by Skirua

    Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok

    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok is proud to present the newest solo show by Skirua, the exhibition title is “SKIRUA’S Hell of Love”, a concept key to interpreting all the most recent works realized by the artist.

    In SKIRUA’s work, reality and the virtual do not oppose one another; rather, they dissolve into each other until they become indistinguishable. Prolonged immersion in digital environments produces a perceptual shift in which the boundary between lived experience and imagined construction becomes porous. Within this space, interiority is no longer separate from the world, but is constantly externalized: what the subconscious generates takes form and becomes reality.

    This process lies at the core of the artist’s research. Already in earlier projects, from Future Paradise to Abyssal Enchantress’s Box, a fluid subjectivity emerges, where identity, memory, and emotion operate as an open system. Recurring figures: dolls, enchantresses, and hybrid creatures are not characters but fragments of the self, projections of an identity in continuous formation. This imagination is rooted in otaku culture and in new forms of digital affectivity, where emotional attachment may develop toward fictional entities rather than real individuals. In such contexts, love is not grounded in reciprocity, but in projection, identification, and imaginative continuity.

    For Skirua, love is not contingent but necessary to existence. It functions as an internal generative force, a condition for living itself. This takes shape in a relationship that began in adolescence with an anime character and has extended for over eight years. What initially emerged as an attraction gradually became a process of deep internalization, dissolving the boundary between self and other: the beloved is no longer external, but incorporated.

    The Hell of Love

    This relationship has profoundly shaped the artist’s identity, transforming her from a disciplined and reserved individual into a more expressive and extreme subjectivity. Love acts here as a force of self-transformation. At the same time, identity becomes unstable, oscillating between self and other, suggesting a form of fusion. A similar ambivalence characterizes her relationship with her own creations, dolls and paintings, which function as emotionally charged presences. They evoke love, tenderness, and devotion, but also destructive impulses and a desire for annihilation. Love is sustained through fantasy, understood as an operative space in which the relationship extends beyond reality, unfolding across multiple worlds and temporalities. This relationship also takes concrete form: the artist collects objects related to the character, creates dolls in her likeness, and has staged a symbolic wedding in real life. A full-back tattoo further inscribes this bond. Here, pain and ecstasy coexist as inseparable elements of love. Love becomes a closed yet expanding system in which imagination, identification, and incorporation coincide, an experience where living, loving, and creating are indistinguishable.

    Across these works, love is not stable or reciprocal, but unfolds as a shifting structure that encompasses devotion, violence, care, loss, and reconstruction. It operates across multiple worlds and identities, continuously redefining the boundaries between self and other, reality and imagination.

    Venue
    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok, Room 201 – 206, River City Bangkok, 23 Soi Charoenkrung 24, Talad Noi, Sampantawong, Bangkok, 10100

    Artists
    Skirua

    Exhibition Dates
    25 April – 31 May 2026

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.tangcontemporary.com/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryartbangkok/

    Contact
    bkk@tangcontemporary.com

    About the Artist

    Skirua
    b. 2003

    Her artistic practice encompasses painting, installation, and film, with a focus on the cultural shifts and conflicts inspired by the internet, social media, and other products of the information age. In particular, she is interested in how the generation born after the year 2000 understand and envision life, the future, and popular culture.

    SKIRUA is a contradiction between reality, society, internet, and fantasy. “SKIRUA” is the name of Guo Yuheng’s imaginary self, who travels through the timeline to become a mimic of different social phenomena, anime characters with different identities, and finally gets lost in herself.

    “The internet changed me.” Skirua is part of a new generation that grew up alongside the rise of the internet and social media. She was just 17 when she held her first solo exhibition, teaching herself to paint through online video tutorials on her iPad. But the internet was more than just an educational tool—it revealed a new world of fantasy, where her various avatars could create intimate connections with others. Her multi- faceted self-portrait is an ode to these myriad identities that exist both online and offline.

    Guo Yu Heng has always aspired to become a fictional character, fall in love with a fictional anime character, get married to the dolls he incarnates, and finally divide her emotions, preferences, and soul into countless dolls. Each doll is its own “doppelganger”, turning itself into a doll to wander and play in the fantasy world. Beauty, scars, and happiness are intertwined. Her imaginary world is a shelter of witches, sealing a myriad of intertwined feelings.

    (Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok)


  • Tang Contemporary Art Presents The Garden of Humans: Gao Hang Solo Exhibition

    Tang Contemporary Art Presents The Garden of Humans: Gao Hang Solo Exhibition

    A vibrant poster for an art exhibition titled 'The Garden of Humans' featuring abstract figures in suits against a bright green background. The exhibition dates are March 7 to April 19, 2026, at Tang Contemporary Art in Bangkok, curated by Huang Ying.
    Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok

    In Christian art and literature, the garden is a sacred space. From the Garden of Eden in Genesis, it serves as a complex symbol concerning the origin of human existence, the awakening of knowledge, moral choice, eternal loss, and spiritual return. In the modern era, the garden motif continues to embody the enduring pursuit of beauty while also becoming intertwined with critiques of social class. However, as Yi-Fu Tuan argues, the garden is by no means a gift of nature or divine providence, but rather a man-made creation. Its seemingly harmless, playful atmosphere, exquisite aesthetics, and religious connotations successfully conceal its reliance on power.

    Gao Hang creates paintings using an airbrush, blending visual styles such as 3D-rendered models, low-pixel aesthetics, and vector polygons. On fluorescent, solid-colored canvases reminiscent of system default backgrounds, he simulates the aesthetic texture of early digital screens. Titled The Garden of Humans, the exhibition literally showcases Gao Hang’s observations of contemporary humanity: a vibrant collection of self-presentations in which people on social media compete for attention like flowers vying to outshine one another. It is also a virtual garden, a hybrid space interweaving diverse cultural objects and specimens from art history. The gallery itself becomes a simulator that emphasizes the garden’s artificiality, attempting to alert viewers to the underlying power structures within the digital realm while prompting reflection on propositions of authenticity and truth in the construction of civilization and technological development.

    Within the exhibition space, Gao Hang’s figure paintings each occupy their own territory on the walls, displaying their postures to the fullest extent. From the fashionable fusion of traditional Asian medical treatment and modern mental illness within a Western social context depicted in Acupuncture Cures Depression, to the sexualized display of the body in Angel of the Day, the gallery embodies the artist’s abstract insights into mass behavior on social media: “In this infinitely expanding network volume, radiant personalities with ‘fluorescent colors’ compete for attention, using exaggerated and peculiar postures to retain fleeting traffic.” This phenomenon corresponds to what Byung-Chul Han calls a “carnival of display”: in a display society driven by traffic, individuals who appear to be freely expressing themselves are, in reality, engaged in voluntary self-exploitation and compulsive performances of “authenticity.” When people constantly require recognition from others to validate their own existence and value, display itself becomes alienated into a form of performance and labor. The stiff, sharply defined figures in Gao Hang’s works are products of this “compulsion for authenticity.” The incongruity and affectation revealed in their movements stem from the distortion caused by friction between individual vitality and digital discipline. This garden of humans thus becomes a microcosm of contemporary meritocracy: seemingly vibrant flowers bloom, yet each is invisibly pruned by the shears of an algorithmic gardener, forming a lifeless, plastic flowerbed. As the boundary between displayed life and real life becomes increasingly blurred, the very concept of reality itself grows ever more suspect.

    Gao Hang’s Garden of Humans is also a site where time and space intermingle. Different historical periods intersect with fragments of contemporary life, assembled and displayed within imagined scenes. Continuing his core concept of “Digital Primitivism,” the artist employs the visual language of the early stages of virtual civilization. Through a process that resembles archaeological excavation and parody within art history, the visual archive of human emotions, thoughts, beliefs, and desires, he attempts to unearth obscured clues about the human condition in contemporary life. Viewers navigate hybrid samples from different stages of civilization from a perspective akin to a 3D game: Picasso’s Les Demoiselles d’Avignon transformed into Les Demoiselles d’Playstationtwo; ancient sculptures unearthed in early modern Italy reappearing in So Ancient Romans Don’t Have Noses; and microcosms of contemporary culture concerning youth, race, and sociality interwoven throughout. This approach reminds us that art history itself is a constructed and critiqued artifact, one that systematically integrates continuity within change and difference, while also attempting to explain change through continuity.

    An Ancient OX offers a direct representation of Gao Hang’s “cave painting for internet civilization.” The hunting scenes on the walls of the Lascaux caves mirror humanity’s primal impulse for new modes of expression. It is precisely during moments of technological rupture or transformation in painting methods that humanity’s most authentic needs and responses are revealed. Here, art history and the history of technological development intertwine, compelling viewers to return to Gao Hang’s civilizational self-awareness, termed “Digital Primitivism”: how do new technological media shape our ways of seeing, understanding, and representing the world? Can the legacy of early digital culture become a vessel for reflecting on contemporary technological alienation? In today’s era of rapidly evolving AI technology, Gao Hang endows the history of digital civilization with a cultural-anthropological dimension, attempting to preserve the pioneering spirit and primal passion of early technological development within the broader understanding of civilizational progress.

    In his new work Head Study, Gao Hang introduces the act of drawing, juxtaposing rough, multi-angle 3D-rendered heads with blurred handwritten marks. The former is generated by algorithms, while the latter constitutes the physical trace left by the artist’s repeated contemplation and experimentation. This contrast gives rise to a sharper existential inquiry concerning our credence in the world we inhabit. As the very existence of truth has been challenged by thinkers such as Jean Baudrillard and Nick Bostrom, viewers are confronted with a fundamental question: is the reality we perceive, and the life we live, merely part of a grander simulation? As the world on screen evolves from crude representation to verisimilitude, Gao Hang perceives that both technology and painting, in this context, become tools, or byproducts, of self-exploration. Even if our world were merely a virtual construct created by a higher life form, this paradoxically renders “the world before our eyes” sufficiently real: it is the only world accessible to us, and therefore deserving of deep study and understanding. Through this lens, we may recalibrate our credence in the nature of reality itself. Gao Hang’s virtual garden of spectacle, a hybrid space of cultural codes, is inherently absurd and playful, like a glitch flashing within consistency and continuity. By deliberately creating these subtle ruptures, the artist allows viewers to glimpse a space closer to the harsh truths underlying the development of technological civilization.

    Venue
    Room 201 – 206, River City Bangkok, 23 Soi Charoenkrung 24, Talad Noi, Sampantawong, Bangkok, 10100

    Artists
    Gao Hang

    Exhibition Dates
    7 March – 19 April, 2026

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.tangcontemporary.com

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryartbangkok

    Contact
    bkk@tangcontemporary.com

    About the Artist

    Portrait of a young man with long black hair, wearing a white t-shirt, sitting at a table covered with paint supplies and surrounded by a colorful, abstract background.

    Gao Hang
    b. 1991, Bao Ding, China

    Gao Hang (Born in 1991) is a Chinese artist now living and working in Houston, TX. Gao illustrates modern human online behaviors with a sense of humor and absurdity while ironically commenting on people’s need for constant gratification on digital screens. His recent solo exhibitions were shown in major galleries in America, Asia, and Europe, including The Hole Gallery in New York, US; Waluso Gallery in London, UK; Tang Contemporary Art in Beijing, China; Pulpo Gallery in Murnau, Germany; and L21 Gallery in Palma, Spain. Gao’s artworks and articles were covered in global publications such as L’Officiel, Art Forum, The Art News, Art in America, Hypebeast, VICE and RADII.

    About Tang Contemporary Art

    Since its founding in Bangkok in 1997, Tang Contemporary Art has opened 8 spaces in Beijing, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Seoul and Singapore to promote the development of experimental art in different regions. In the past 28 years, Tang Contemporary Art has organized groundbreaking exhibitions in its gallery spaces, and also cooperated with important art institutions in China and abroad to accomplish outstanding art projects. The gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned Tang Contemporary Art internationally renowned recognition, establishing its status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia. 

    As one of China’s most influential contemporary art platforms, Tang Contemporary Art maintains a high standard of exhibition programming. Tang Contemporary Art represents or collaborates with leading figures in international contemporary art, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Shen Yuan, Zhu Jinshi, Chen Danqing, Liu Qinghe, Liu Xiaodong, Chen Shaoxiong, Wang Yuping, Shen Ling, Shen Liang, Wu Yi, Xia Xiaowan, He Duoling, Mao Xuhui, Wang Huangsheng, Yang Jiechang, Tan Ping, Wang Du,Yan Lei, Yue Minjun, Wang Jianwei, Yangjiang Group, Zheng Guogu, Lin Yilin, Sun Yuan&Peng Yu, Qin Ga, Wang Qingsong, Yin Zhaoyang, Feng Yan, Guo Wei, Chen Wenbo, Ling Jian, Qin Qi, Yang Yong, Peng Wei, He An, Zhao Zhao, Xu Qu, Chen Yujun, Chen Yufan, Xue Feng, Cai Lei, Li Qing, Wang Sishun, Xu Xiaoguo, Lí Wei, Liu Yujia, Wu Wei, Yang Bodu, You Yong, Li Erpeng, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Adel Abdessemed, Niki de Saint Phalle, AES+F , Michael Zelehosk, Jonas Burgert, Christian Lemmerz, Michael Kvium, Sakarin Krue-On, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Natee Utarit, Kitti Narod, Gongkan, Entang Wiharso, Heri Dono, Nam June Paik, Park Seungmo, Jae Yong Kim, Diren Lee, Dinh Q. Lê, Rodel Tapaya, Jigger Cruz, Ayka Go, Raffy Napay, H.H.Lim, Etsu Egami, etc.

    (Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)


  • Dib Bangkok Presents (In)visible Presence

    Dib Bangkok Presents (In)visible Presence

    Poster credit: Dib Bangkok Museum

    A painting of a gust of wind, music inspired by memories of summer, the warm scent of herbal medicines. The artworks in this exhibition ask: how do we remember what is dear to us, yet invisible?

    As Dib Bangkok’s inaugural show,(In)visible Presence honors the countless individuals—some of whom have passed away—who transformed this museum from a dream on the horizon into reality. Drawing from a collection shaped over three decades and expanded through new collaborations, the exhibition brings together 80 works by 40 contemporary artists, many showing in Thailand for the first time. Through sound, scent, light, and unconventional materials, the artworks enable us to sense what cannot be seen.

    Spanning the museum’s three floors, the exhibition follows shifting relationships between material, memory, and the unseen. Level 1 introduces artworks that transform commonplace materials into surprising forms, echoing the experimental legacy of 1960–80s movements like arte povera and their enduring influence. Level 2 brings together works that drift between memory and imagination, with altered diaries and salvaged objects evoking the stories we hold but rarely speak. Level 3 includes a feature display of artist Montien Boonma, whose monumental installations using scent and negative space offer a path toward healing. Taken together, the exhibition offers us a moment to attune to the invisible forces that move through us and remind us of who we are today.

    Photo credit: Courtesy of Dib Bangkok, Photo by W Workspace

    The Opening of Dib Bangkok, Thailand

    On December 21, 2025, Bangkok, Thailand, Dib Bangkok opens to the public today, marking the arrival of the first international contemporary art museum in Bangkok and the first in Thailand to present its own world-class collection of contemporary art from around the globe.

    Conceived by the late Petch Osathanugrah and brought to reality by his son Purat (Chang) Osathanugrah, Dib Bangkok is set within a 1980s adaptive-reuse warehouse redesigned by Kulapat Yantrasast of WHY Architecture in collaboration with Thailand-based international architectural design firm Architects 49 (A49). Its inaugural exhibition, titled (In)visible Presence, on view through August 3, 2026, brings together significant Thai and international contemporary artworks for a multisensory exploration of memory and the unseen, curated by Ariana Chaivaranon under the artistic direction of inaugural Director, Dr. Miwako Tezuka.

    Dib Bangkok’s Founding Chairman Purat (Chang) Osathanugrah is an influential Thai business leader and educator. Following the passing of Petch Osathanugrah in 2023, Chang brought together the museum’s core team to carry forward his father’s vision, guide its transformation into a public institution, and continue to grow its world-class contemporary art collection with a strong sense of global relevance. With this expanding collection at the heart of its presentations, Dib Bangkok opens as a new international platform for creative exchange in Thailand and Southeast Asia and takes its name from the Thai word dib, meaning “raw” or “natural, authentic state,” an ethos reflected in its mission, design, and programming.

    Photo credit: Courtesy of Dib Bangkok, Photo by W Workspace

    (In)visible Presence

    Dib Bangkok’s grand opening exhibition, (In)visible Presence, presents key works from the museum’s collection across its expansive grounds and galleries. Designed in dialogue with the building’s architecture, (In)visible Presence forms a three-level narrative journey that reflects the idea of the past guiding us into the future. Through its unifying theme, the exhibition poses a vital question: how do we remember what is dear to us, yet invisible?

    The exhibition moves in tandem with the museum’s ascending architecture: from grounded, sensory works on the first floor; intimate, memory-driven pieces on the second; to expansive, light-infused works on the third. Inside the galleries, visitors encounter major installations by Montien Boonma and Somboon Hormtientong, large-scale sculptures by Lee Bul and Anselm Kiefer, and paintings by a diverse range of artists such as Alex Katz, Yuree Kensaku, and Jessie Homer French. These are shown alongside mixed media and new media works by critically acclaimed artists from Thailand and beyond.

    Extending beyond the museum walls, outdoor installations transform the landscape into an integral part of the experience. Alicja Kwade’s Pars pro Toto (2020), an installation of 11 monumental stone globes ranging from 70 to 250 cm in diameter, anchors the courtyard with a poetic meditation on planetary systems and materiality. On the upper terrace overlooking the courtyard, Pinaree Sanpitak’s Breast Stupa Topiary (2013), a series of stainless-steel forms shaped as breast-like stupas, invites reflection on femininity, spirituality, and the body, softening the hard lines of the city with a presence both tender and profound.

    Alicja Kwade, Pars pro Toto, 2020, Courtesy of Dib Bangkok, Photographer Auntika Ounjittichai, 2025
    Finnegan Shannon, Do you want us here or not (Dib), 2025, Courtesy of Dib Bangkok, Photographer Auntika Ounjittichai, 2025

    For many featured artists, including Sho Shibuya, Finnegan Shannon, and Hugh Hayden, (In)visible Presence marks their first presentation in Thailand, expanding a global dialogue with local artists through a shared inquiry into the conditions of human existence: ephemerality, memory, and identity.

    Dib Bangkok’s permanent collection is dedicated to global contemporary art, with a focus on works that challenge perceptions, spark dialogue, and invite deep reflection on the complexities of human existence in manifold expressions. The collection comprises over 1,000 works by over 200 artists worldwide, spanning a wide range of media, including painting, sculpture, photography, large-scale installations, and new media, dating from the 1960s to the present.

    Sho Shibuya, Memory, 2025, Courtesy of Dib Bangkok, Photographer Wikran Poungput

    On Level 1 of the Museum, Marco Fusinato’s Constellations (2015–2025) amplifies our own gestures with a sudden, body-shaking blast of sound. In Jannis Kounellis’s Untitled (1998), rolls of secondhand clothing pressed against double-bed-sized steel sheets give monumental form and weight to the textures of everyday life. Passing through the metal detector embedded in Hugh Hayden’s Untitled Threshold (After Victor Horta, After Charleston) (2019), we step into a charged question: what makes a place feel like a sanctuary?

    On Level 2, The ornate columns of Somboon Homtienthong’s The Unheard Voice (1995) hold visual and intangible traces of their journey from Mae Sariang to the hands of the artist. Rebecca Horn’s The Lover’s Bed (1990) stages a dreamlike scene inspired by her surreal film, Buster’s Bedroom, in real life. Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s Emerald (2007) projects dreams of faraway places onto the bed of an abandoned hotel room.

    Somboon Hormtientong, The Unheard Voice, 1995, Courtesy of Dib Bangkok, Photographer Auntika Ounjittichai, 2025
    Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Morakot (Emerald), 2007, Courtesy of Dib Bangkok, Photographer Auntika Ounjittichai, 2025 

    On Level 3, Der verlorene Buchstabe (2019) marks the first presentation of Anselm Kiefer’s large-scale installation work in Thailand. Shown here for the first time with all 500 bells as Montien Boonma envisioned,Lotus Sound (1992/1999–2000) resonates with silence, and Zodiac Houses (1998–1999), Montien Boonma’s final masterpiece before his passing, offers a pathway connecting us to the heavens through celestial constellations.

    Montien Boonma, Lotus Sound, 1992/1999–2000, Courtesy of Dib Bangkok, Photographer Auntika Ounjittichai, 2025 

    Looking ahead to 2026, Dib Bangkok will expand its programming with initiatives that strengthen accessibility, artistic exchange, and dialogue between Thailand, the region, and the wider world. Upcoming programs include weekly curator-led tours, new family workshops designed to build creative confidence across generations, and an international symposium on contemporary art in Southeast Asia.

    Dib Bangkok will offer local and international visitors a new cultural hub in the heart of Thailand’s bustling capital, featuring an exceptional contemporary art collection, and driven by a team of ambitious experts.

    Pinareee Sanpitak and James Turrell, Courtesy of Dib Bangkok, Photographer Watcharapong Sermwichitchai, 2025
    Installation view of (In)visible Presence, Courtesy of Dib Bangkok

    Venue
    111 Soi Sukhumvit 40, Phra Khanong, Khlong Toei, Bangkok 10110 Thailand

    Artists
    40 Contemporary Artists (for full list of names please visit Dib Bangkok: (In)visible Presence)

    Exhibition Dates
    21 December, 2025 – 03 August, 2026

    Gallery Hours
    Thursday – Monday | 10 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    Dib Bangkok

    Instagram
    www.instagram.com/dibbangkok/

    Contact
    info@dibbangkok.org

    (Text and images courtesy of Dib Bangkok Museum)


  • Tang Contemporary Art Presents Group Exhibition: Tracing Places, Weaving Times

    Tang Contemporary Art Presents Group Exhibition: Tracing Places, Weaving Times

    Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art

    Tang Contemporary Art presents Tracing Places, Weaving Times, curated by Cynthia Liu and Terry Chong, on exhibit from 17 January 2026 – 1 March 2026, in Bangkok.  This group exhibition brings together three Thai artists—Sornchai Pongsa, Butsapasila Wanjing, and Amalapon Robinson—whose practices explore how identity is formed at the intersection of place, culture, and memory. 

    Whether bridging rural borderlands and urban density or myth and lived reality, the exhibition offers a multilayered portrait of Thailand as experienced through the next generation of artists born between the 1990s and 2000s.  Moving between the past and the present, between the personal and the collective, the exhibition invites viewers to consider how Thailand’s many stories are carried, reshaped, and reimagined across generations.  

    Across Thailand’s diverse regions, cultural identities emerge not only from formal histories but from the intimate details of daily life—traditions passed on quietly, stories shared casually, materials handled out of habit and necessity. These nuances, often invisible from the outside, form the true texture of the Thai identity. Grounded in this idea, the featured artists draw from the spaces they grew up in—mountainous borders, northern villages, Bangkok’s layered urban sprawl—yet render their memories through contemporary visual languages. Each distinct, yet interconnected, their practices echo, diverge, and intersect, forming an open-ended narrative about belonging, change, and continuity. Together, they present Thailand not as a single story but as a complex and evolving constellation of histories, ethnicities, and lived realities.

    Sornchai Pongsa, Ritual Laborers, 2026, Stainless steel sheet, transparent nylon line, stainless steel objects, 120 x 120 cm

    Sornchai Pongsa: Diaspora, Displacement, Becoming

    Hailing from a Mon community along Thailand’s Western border, Sornchai Pongsa’s work emerges from a lived experience shaped by cultural inheritance, displacement, and adaptation. His conceptual practice draws on the intertwined history of his family and people—stories marked by movement, negotiation, and survival. Drawing from familial stories, local histories, and the complexities of modern existence, Sornchai’s pieces evoke a sense of loss and adaptation, yet also resilience and redefinition.  Through powerful visual forms and mixed media artworks, he captures the simultaneous ache for what is left behind and the urgency to forge new identities and preservation of traditions in unfamiliar landscapes.  His pieces become vessels for memory—at once fragile and forceful—inviting viewers to witness the multi-layered experience of diaspora within the Thai context.

    Building on his earlier work Mon Spirits Totem (2016), Pongsa presents a technologically infused meditation on “statelessness,” conceptualizing the body and territory as absent hardware and the spirit as enduring software. Through ethereal installations of suspended structures and volumes of light, he visualizes the migration of identity from the physical to the metaphysical, raising profound questions about the persistence of ritual and belief in a digitized era. His work emphasizes both loss and adaptation, showing how cultural memory endures even when physical borders are absent. 

    Butsapasila Wanjing, Welcome Drink, 2026, Oil on canvas, 40 x 60 cm

    Butsapasila Wanjing: Memory, Myth, and the Remaking of History

    Butsapasila Wanjing approaches memory as something formed not only through official histories but through the informal stories embedded in everyday life. His practice draws from Lanna culture, folkloric and mystical beliefs, childhood memories of Chiang Mai, and raw materials collected from the northern landscapes he grew up in. His works—textured, layered, and enigmatic—entice viewers to look closer, searching for traces of narratives that have been transformed, suppressed, or forgotten.

    A central focus of his recent work is the rewriting of historical memory spaces.  Butsapasila’s exploration extends beyond Thailand’s borders. His exploration of overland trade routes examines the longstanding cultural and economic relationships between Thailand and mainland China. From ancient exchanges of goods and knowledge along the Tea Horse Road—glazed ceramics, tea-making traditions, the role of horses—to their later integration into the vast Silk Road network, he traces how these routes shaped communal life in the borderlands.

    In the present, he observes how the Belt and Road Initiative has reshaped these ancient corridors into pathways of capital, cross-border investment, and sometimes illicit or informal economies. What were once routes of cultural circulation have become sites where geopolitical power is contested and negotiated. Through paintings and mixed-media presentations, Butsapasila renders these overlapping histories visible—revealing the delicate interplay between memory, state power, regional identity, and the shifting forces that continue to shape northern Thailand.

    Amalapon Robinson, Chinatown, 2026, Oil on canvas, 100 x 100 cm

    Amalapon Robinson: Urban Light, Inner Loneliness

    In contrast to the northern landscapes and border narratives of Sornchai and Butsapasila, Amalapon Robinson turns her gaze toward the dense urban rhythms of Bangkok—a city of constant illumination. Growing up between two cultures, Amalapon investigates identity and belonging within a metropolis defined by artificial light. Her hauntingly beautiful oil paintings capture intimate domestic scenes and everyday urban moments, using the interplay of radiance and shadow to reflect the emotional undercurrents of city life.

    In her work, light becomes both a physical necessity and a metaphor for searching—searching for connection, clarity, or simply a sense of place amid the city’s overwhelming glare. While there is always light in darkness, Amalapon reveals how urban brightness can coexist with profound loneliness. Her paintings resonate with quiet intensity, suggesting that in a world saturated with illumination, the most meaningful forms of luminosity may be internal.

    Together, these three artists illustrate the many ways Thai identity is shaped—by geography, by memory, by generations of cultural inheritance, and by the changing landscapes of modern life. Their works bridge past and present, local and national, rural and urban, inviting viewers to consider how individual stories intersect to form a broader cultural tapestry.

    Tracing Places, Weaving Times does not offer a singular definition of Thai identity. Instead, it opens a space for reflection—on where we come from, what we carry, and how our surroundings continually shape who we are becoming. Through the perspectives of the next generation of Thai artists, the exhibition presents the Thai experience as a place of layered histories, evolving cultures, and rich, interconnected experiences.

    Venue
    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok

    Artists
    Sornchai Phongsa, Butsapasila Wanjing, Amalapon Robinson

    Exhibtion Dates
    17 January – 1 March, 2026

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.tangcontemporary.com

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryart/

    Contact
    bkk@tangcontemporary.com

    About the Artists

    SORNCHAI PHONGSA

    b. 1991, Thailand

    Sornchai Phongsa was born and raised within the Mon ethnic community in Thailand, an upbringing that shaped his engagement with migration, displacement, and hybrid identities in Southeast Asia. Drawing on his heritage and academic training and having graduated from Silpakorn University with a BFA in 2015 and an MFA in 2017, Phongsa develops a visual language that interweaves personal memory, collective history, and socio-political narratives.

    Working across installation and mixed-media, he employs vernacular materials and performative spatial strategies to recontextualize spiritual traditions and interrogate the politics of belonging and territory. Key projects include Mon’s Spirits Totem (Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, 2017), Montopia (Cité Internationale des Arts, Paris, 2018), Le Flash (École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris, 2018), and Alien Capital for the Bangkok Art Biennale (2018).

    Phongsa has participated in residencies at Tokyo Arts and Space and Cité Internationale des Arts, with works presented in exhibitions including Dogma Yard (Gallery Seescape, Chiang Mai) and MythMakers—Spectrosynthesis III 神話製造者——光.合作用 III (Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong, 2023).

    In 2025, he presented his solo exhibition Diaspora at River City Bangkok, investigating displacement and hybrid identities among marginalized communities. He continues to develop research-driven projects exploring memory, migration, and the shifting cartographies of place and identity, extending his critical engagement with contemporary social and cultural transformations.

    BUTSAPASILA WANJING

    b. 2000, Chiang Mai, Thailand

    Butsapasila Wanjing graduated from Silpakorn University in 2022 with a Bachelor’s of Fine Arts.  His work delves into the historical and cultural landscapes of Thailand, addressing political, social, and environmental themes.

    Butsapasila is interested in the processes through which collective memory of the past transforms over time, leaving traces and effects that persist into the present. His practice draws on diverse sources, including historical narratives shaped by conspiracy theories found in blogs and online media, supernatural beliefs transmitted through oral traditions, and local myths and fragmented histories that cannot be fully integrated into dominant, centralized historical narratives. 

    By also examining personal memory, he seeks to connect individual experience with broader social and cultural dynamics, reflecting on how the past is continually reinterpreted from multiple perspectives in the present and how these shifting understandings shape contemporary perceptions of history and identity.

    AMALAPON ROBINSON

    b. 1995, USA

    Born 1995, Thai-American artist, Amalapon Robinson graduated from Silpakorn University in 2019.  She has exhibited in group exhibitions in Thailand, at VS Gallery, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, and Silapakorn University.  Working primarily in oil painting, her practice explores quiet emotional landscapes within urban night scenes, with a focus on artificial light from windows, street lamps, and interior spaces.

    Raised in an apartment in Bangkok, Amalapon draws from long-term observation of dense urban environments. Her paintings often emerge from moments of looking at the city from a distance, through windows or during night-time travel where artificial light becomes a symbol of living and working, carrying traces of life, hope, and dreams within the city. Through muted palettes and softened contrasts, her work captures a sense of calm and stillness embedded in ordinary, often overlooked urban spaces.

    Amalapon explores the interactions between light and darkness – investigating how we use and engage with artificial lights in our everyday lives, and how urban society is dependent on this use of light.  Though there is light in darkness physically, living in a city can result in a feeling of loneliness and isolation.  This juxtaposition between the physical use of light and its metaphorical meaning is represented in her works, as she seeks more luminosity within the city.

    About Tang Contemporary Art

    Since its founding in Bangkok in 1997, Tang Contemporary Art has opened 8 spaces in Beijing, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Seoul and Singapore to promote the development of experimental art in different regions. In the past 28 years, Tang Contemporary Art has organized groundbreaking exhibitions in its gallery spaces, and also cooperated with important art institutions in China and abroad to accomplish outstanding art projects. The gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned Tang Contemporary Art internationally renowned recognition, establishing its status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia. 

    As one of China’s most influential contemporary art platforms, Tang Contemporary Art maintains a high standard of exhibition programming. Tang Contemporary Art represents or collaborates with leading figures in international contemporary art, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Shen Yuan, Zhu Jinshi, Chen Danqing, Liu Qinghe, Liu Xiaodong, Chen Shaoxiong, Wang Yuping, Shen Ling, Shen Liang, Wu Yi, Xia Xiaowan, He Duoling, Mao Xuhui, Wang Huangsheng, Yang Jiechang, Tan Ping, Wang Du,Yan Lei, Yue Minjun, Wang Jianwei, Yangjiang Group, Zheng Guogu, Lin Yilin, Sun Yuan&Peng Yu, Qin Ga, Wang Qingsong, Yin Zhaoyang, Feng Yan, Guo Wei, Chen Wenbo, Ling Jian, Qin Qi, Yang Yong, Peng Wei, He An, Zhao Zhao, Xu Qu, Chen Yujun, Chen Yufan, Xue Feng, Cai Lei, Li Qing, Wang Sishun, Xu Xiaoguo, Lí Wei, Liu Yujia, Wu Wei, Yang Bodu, You Yong, Li Erpeng, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Adel Abdessemed, Niki de Saint Phalle, AES+F , Michael Zelehosk, Jonas Burgert, Christian Lemmerz, Michael Kvium, Sakarin Krue-On, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Natee Utarit, Kitti Narod, Gongkan, Entang Wiharso, Heri Dono, Nam June Paik, Park Seungmo, Jae Yong Kim, Diren Lee, Dinh Q. Lê, Rodel Tapaya, Jigger Cruz, Ayka Go, Raffy Napay, H.H.Lim, Etsu Egami, etc.

    (Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)


  • Tang Contemporary Art Presents The Wayfarer in Motion, a Group Exhibition by Five Artists

    Tang Contemporary Art Presents The Wayfarer in Motion, a Group Exhibition by Five Artists

    Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art

    Tang Contemporary Art is pleased to announce the group exhibition The Wayfarer in Motion, in Bangkok, from 29 November 2025 to 11 January 2026. The exhibition features works by five artists: Pocono Zhao Yu (China), Gabriel Cheah (Malaysia), Duairak Padungvichean (Thailand), Verapat Sitipol (Thailand), and Aphisit Sidsunthia (Thailand).

    Humanity today resides within a torrent of information, capital, and digital currents. Familiar coordinates dissolve, stable forms are reconstructed, and individuals are cast into an ever-shifting, boundless field. It is as if we are in the midst of a vast and invisible migration, where the ground beneath us is no longer solid, but a quicksand of trends, fragmented identities, and fleeting points of attention. As the weight of existence lightens, what replaces it is a heightened sense of presence, one that signals a silent yet profound transformation in our connection to the real world.

    This exhibition invites viewers on a journey of self-exploration that traverses both time and space. The five artists use images as vehicles for spiritual migration, attempting to reveal resilient forms of existence within the fluid and alienating landscapes of change. The nomadic subject has no fixed coordinates; in the ceaseless movement of the body and the constant breaking of boundaries, the subject must confront vulnerability and clarify its authentic self. The exhibition seeks to explore the question of “how to be in the world”: how can individuals, through artistic practice, find orientation and affirm their existence amid alienating internal and external terrains?

    Pocono Zhao Yu employs the method of “archaeological notes,” juxtaposing symbolic images and text. Different cultural genes “hybridize,” generating new identities at the “interstices” and “boundaries.” Zhao Yu has long researched the “Sun God” as a core symbol carrying the cultural evolution of both East and West, sun worship represents humanity’s most primal impulse to journey: where the sun rises, humans explore the world and pursue inner desire. Its significance, evolving from a collective totem to a reflection of individual spirit, illustrates how humanity’s outward exploration ultimately returns to the self.

    Aphisit Sidsunthia’s works question the notion of “completeness” by embracing the inevitable imperfections and ambiguities of existence. By challenging color theory and employing both manual and digital techniques to collage, remove, and distort images, the artist emphasizes “love” as an event that reshapes being. Fragments of subconscious memory are retrieved and overlapped with geometric forms, opening windows to alternate realities. These fragments become ghosts of resurrected past events, crossing through societal norms and time, suspended between the virtual and the real.

    Gabriel Cheah’s Still Kind series highlights active choice within given environments, never abandoning the pursuit of inner light even during moments of heaviness or self-doubt. The artist embraces vulnerability and transforms it into an attitude of “self-will” and gentle resistance, thus defining the essence of selfhood and freedom.

    Verapat Sitipol and Duairak Padungvichean’s works present natural landscapes brimming with joy and vitality. Sitipol’s paintings attempt to capture the energy of nature rather than merely its appearance, absorbing and transforming the external world to explore a more authentic and poetic mode of “dwelling.” Forest and mountain scenes, depicted with vibrant brushstrokes, resemble musical scores of natural symphonies, opening possibilities for interpreting musicality beyond painting. These lines recreate both the existence and disappearance of the landscape, capturing the fleeting reality and fragility of dynamic scenery.

    Padungvichean’s dreamlike desert landscapes serve as metaphors for both external and internal worlds. The wondrous creatures in her works embark on unknown journeys in search of meaning. This non-purposeful migratory poetics evokes a nomadic attitude toward the land, not to possess, but to continually seek direction in unfamiliar environments, an “in-the-world” experience that redraws the map of the self through movement.

    “On this desperate land returned to its primordial innocence, he, the traveler lost in an ancient world, rediscovered his connections.” From the symbol of the Sun God to the ghosts of hidden memories, from inner seekers to shifting terrains, the five artists reassemble memories in the gaps between history and the present, reconstructing narratives where nature and civilization converge. The “self” is shaped, tested, and deepened through encounters with different cultural symbols, others, and predicaments, within this nomadic journey of interwoven inner and outer worlds.

    Venue
    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok, Room 201 – 206, River City Bangkok, 23 Soi Charoenkrung 24, Talad Noi, Sampantawong, Bangkok, 10100 

    Artists
    Pocono Zhao Yu,  Verapat Sitipol, Aphisit Sidsunthia, Duairak Padungvichean and Gabriel Cheah

    Exhibtion Dates
    29 November, 2025 – 11 January, 2026

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.tangcontemporary.com/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryartbangkok/

    Contact
    bkk@tangcontemporary.com

    About Gallery

    Since its founding in Bangkok in 1997, Tang Contemporary Art has opened 8 spaces in Beijing, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Seoul and Singapore to promote the development of experimental art in different regions. In the past 28 years, Tang Contemporary Art has organized groundbreaking exhibitions in its gallery spaces, and also cooperated with important art institutions in China and abroad to accomplish outstanding art projects. The gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned Tang Contemporary Art internationally renowned recognition, establishing its status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia. 

    As one of China’s most influential contemporary art platforms, Tang Contemporary Art maintains a high standard of exhibition programming. Tang Contemporary Art represents or collaborates with leading figures in international contemporary art, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Shen Yuan, Zhu Jinshi, Chen Danqing, Liu Qinghe, Liu Xiaodong, Chen Shaoxiong, Wang Yuping, Shen Ling, Shen Liang, Wu Yi, Xia Xiaowan, He Duoling, Mao Xuhui, Wang Huangsheng, Yang Jiechang, Tan Ping, Wang Du, Yan Lei, Yue Minjun, Wang Jianwei, Yangjiang Group, Zheng Guogu, Lin Yilin, Sun Yuan&Peng Yu, Qin Ga, Wang Qingsong, Yin Zhaoyang, Feng Yan, Guo Wei, Chen Wenbo, Ling Jian, Qin Qi, Yang Yong, Peng Wei, He An, Zhao Zhao, Xu Qu, Chen Yujun, Chen Yufan, Xue Feng, Cai Lei, Li Qing, Wang Sishun, Xu Xiaoguo, Lí Wei, Liu Yujia, Wu Wei, Yang Bodu, You Yong, Li Erpeng, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Adel Abdessemed, Niki de Saint Phalle, AES+F , Michael Zelehosk, Jonas Burgert, Christian Lemmerz, Michael Kvium, Sakarin Krue-On, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Natee Utarit, Kitti Narod, Gongkan, Entang Wiharso, Heri Dono, Nam June Paik, Park Seungmo, Jae Yong Kim, Diren Lee, Dinh Q. Lê, Rodel Tapaya, Jigger Cruz, Ayka Go, Raffy Napay, H.H.Lim, Etsu Egami, etc.

    (Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)


  • BACC Presents Undo Planet Part 1: “UNDO DMZ” Exhibition, a Group Exhibition by Nine Artists

    BACC Presents Undo Planet Part 1: “UNDO DMZ” Exhibition, a Group Exhibition by Nine Artists

    Poster credit: Bangkok Art and Culture Centre (BACC)

    Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, in collaboration with Space for Contemporary Art and Korean Foundation for International Cultural Exchange, co-organises an international exhibition, Undo Planet. The exhibition Undo Planet uses art as a medium to examine possibilities for restoring nature. The artists join in wrestling with the issue of global climate change, offering various attempts and suggestions as to how our crisis-stricken Earth might be restored which consists of two parts: Undo DMZ and Land Art and Non-Human Beings.

    The title “Undo DMZ” originates in DMZ Un-Do, the name of a work by artist Haegue Yang. “Undo DMZ” uses art as a lens to imagine the current DMZ—a symbol of war and division that teems with soldiers—as a setting where the recovery of wildness and biodiversity has only been encouraged by the restrictions on people’s access. The exhibition starts with works associated with birds, animals that are capable of freely flying over human-made national boundaries. Adrian Göllner’s Trace (2023), Young In Hong’s White Cranes and Snowfall (2024) and Accidental Paradise (2025), and Jin-me Yoon’s Dreaming Birds Know No Borders (2021) all adopt birds as themes. 

    Trace started from the artist’s interest in birds that inhabit the DMZ or pass through it on their migrations. After observing wild birds during a residency near the DMZ, Göllner created drawings reflecting the presence of birds that live in the refuge represented by a space on the boundaries, outside the field of human view. Hong’s White Cranes and Snowfall is an installation work in which eight pairs of shoes made with sedge have been placed on white pebbles. The resulting world conveys the impression of the shoes of a crane having been set down on snow. The work is presented alongside the same artist’s Accidental Paradise, a sound-based work combining the cries of cranes with the artist’s own voice and natural sounds from the DMZ. This work breaks down the hierarchies between species and the boundaries separating fiction from truth and stories from voices. Yoon’s Dreaming Birds Know No Borders is a video work focusing on the story of an ornithologist whose family was separated by the Korean War. Through the medium of a traditional Korean crane dance, it connects history and place with the disconnection within family.

    Adrian Göllner, Trace, 2023, Watercolour on paper, Dimensions variable, Courtesy of the Artist

    Following these bird-centred works are creations by the Thai artist Akkachet Sikkakorn and the Korean artist Joon Kim. Sikkakorn’s Fragile Memories (2025) was based on a field survey examining records of the war in the DMZ region, along with the ecological environment and cultural memories. The artist makes use of protective talismans originating in Buddhist culture as the work re-examines the stories of the “Little Tigers,” a Thai regiment that fought in the Korean War. Kim’s Mixed signals (2025), an installation work based on sounds and images gathered from the DMZ’s border region, offers a setting where surveillance and ecology intersect. Acoustic sounds from nature and electromagnetic symbols are presented through a drawer-like operation device and a horizontally rotating sculpture, guiding the viewer to actively examine a DMZ landscape where disparate signals exist in layered form.

    Joon Kim, Mixed Signals, 2025, Mixed media (amplifier, speaker, wood, images, multi-channel sound), Dimensions variable, Courtesy of the Artist

    The next space features work by the Korean artist collective of Kyung Jin Zoh, Cho Hye Ryeong and the Vietnamese artist Tuan Mami. Zoh and Cho’s Parallel Botany (2023) focuses on plants referred to by different names in North and South Korea. The video work shows these botanical names being recited in the same language yet different words. Exhibited with it is DMZ Botanic Garden (2019–Present), which presents 23 plant specimens representative of the flora in the DMZ, bearing narratives of division as they collectively form an ecological and cultural landscape of the DMZ’s natural environment. Tuan Mami focuses on mugwort, a plant that he discovered during his DMZ research in Borderless Garden (no.2) (2025). Found across various regions in Asia, mugwort is a plant characterised by its ability to grow across borders in different climate environments. To show its vitality and mobility, the artist personally cultivated mugwort gathered in Thailand (the site of the exhibition), Vietnam (his own home country), Taiwan, and Korea’s DMZ. A work of wall art inspired by Korea’s foundational Dangun myth expands this legendary narrative of an animal’s human transformation into linkages between plants, animals, and people. This serves a mediating role in terms of the overall exhibition, as it leads into the second part titled “Land Art and Non-Human Beings.”

    Kyung Jin Zoh/ Cho Hye Ryeong, DMZ Botanic Garden, 2019–Present, Plant specimens, Dimensions variable, With the cooperation of the Korea National Arboretum, Courtesy of the Artist

    The final space presents work by artist Haegue Yang—with honeybees playing a mediating part—and by ikkibawiKrrr. Yang’s DMZ Un-Do (2020) is a wallpaper-based work that juxtaposes various signs and symbolic images into something resembling radar: barbed wire, a “last rest area” sign, a hydroelectric power dam, a windmill, lightning, puzzle pieces, and more. This is a visualisation of the complex identity and energy of the Korean Peninsula as a setting where boundaries intersect with movement, tradition with modernity, and reality with imagination. Another creation by Yang, an animated work titled Yellow Dance (2024), adopts a honeybee named “Bonghee” as its central character as it tells the history of the Cold War in a monodrama format. The connected sculpture installations Palanquin Bee Soul Site (2024) and Lighthouse Bee Double Mansion (2024) are also mediated by bees, originating from the structures of hives used in apiculture. The work of ikkibawiKrrr is presented on the path leading out of the exhibition. Rhapsody (2024) focuses on spaces that are like “openings” in the DMZ: places that are not perceived because they exist outside our field of vision, places where the restriction of human access has ironically made them important for the natural growth of plant life. Exhibited together with this video is graffiti-based work that makes use of plants gathered from inside the Civilian Control Zone. It depicts the plants as being like invaders occupying a space vacated by human beings. Rhapsody shows plants awaiting the day they can be sent to North Korea, as the sounds of shells serve as a symbol of the Cold War. This alludes metaphorically to a laboratory preparing for a future that may someday come.

    Haegue Yang, Lighthouse Bee Double Mansion, 2024, EPP hives, aluminium mesh, spray paint, metal latches, metal components, origami paper, LED tubes, cable, XPS foam board, smokers, 158 x 72 x 87 cm, Courtesy of Kukje Gallery

    This exhibition was supported by the Korean Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, and Korean Foundation for International Cultural Exchange (KOFICE) as part of the “Touring K-Arts” project.

    Venue
    Main Exhibition Gallery, 7th floor, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre

    Artists
    Adrian Göllner, Akkachet Sikkakorn, Haegue Yang, ikkibawiKrrr, Jin-me Yoon, Joon Kim, Kyung Jin Zoh/ Cho Hye Ryeong, Tuan Mami, Young In Hong

    Exhibition Dates
    October 25 – November 25, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 10 AM – 8 PM

    Website
    http://www.bacc.or.th

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/baccbangkok/

    Contact
    exhibition.bacc@gmail.com

    (Text and images courtesy of Bangkok Art and Culture Centre (BACC) )


  • Tang Contemporary Art Presents Seeking in the Interstices, a Solo Exhibition by Tos Suntos

    Tang Contemporary Art Presents Seeking in the Interstices, a Solo Exhibition by Tos Suntos

    Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art

    Identity, culture, belief, and faith do not always emerge at once. They take shape gradually, eventually becoming the foundation of lives through traditions, art, language, and everyday practices. Over time, these layers form the basis of how we come to understand ourselves and others. Belief often marks the beginning of this process; when it becomes unwavering, it transforms into faith, a deeper conviction that shapes values, attitudes, and ways of living. Culture, therefore, is more than an external form. It is a reservoir of belief and faith that operates beneath consciousness. It is within this terrain that Tos Suntos turns to the visual, as a means to reflect on questions of identity, faith, and freedom.

    Raised in a Thai family, Tos Suntos was immersed from childhood in an environment where Buddhism intertwined with folk traditions. Over the years, these beliefs became invisible codes of conduct, quietly shaping his earliest sense of morality and value. Temples, architectural spaces, and ritual objects were once seen as protective “shields,” offering safety in daily life while also defining subtle boundaries of thought. With adolescence, however, came the influence of the digital age and increasingly diverse social interactions, which placed his inherited system of faith in sharp conflict with the demands of modern society. To adapt into society, one often cultivates an “artificial self.” For Tos Suntos, this inner dissonance went beyond personal identity. It raised a larger question: how might one navigate the structures of faith and society without being confined by them? This has since become the central aesthetic and philosophical pursuit of his practice.

    Tos Suntos, Trapped in the Structure of Belief, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 200 x 180 cm

    Much of his work is driven by this pursuit. At its core, is Enimous, a symbolic alter ego that embodies the artist’s negotiation with these tensions. Enimous appears trapped within rigid architectural frames or distorted by geometric grids, visible yet obstructed, as if caught behind transparent walls. Tos Suntos describes this state as being “imprisoned within the system of faith.” The phrase extends beyond religion to include the norms, values, and languages that society internalizes in us. In his writings, he asks: “Can we have faith without being stuck or buried in it? Can we have our own identity without merging with the one that is defined by society?” In works such as Trapped in the Structure of Belief and Layers of Class, Enimous is elongated, repeated, or twisted, producing a visual instability that resonates with the identity anxieties of contemporary life.

    Tos Suntos, Bound Freedom, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 120 x 150 cm

    Visually, Tos Suntos has developed a distinctive language. He weaves together traditional Thai motifs, mythological figures, and symbols from popular culture, merging them into compositions that feel both familiar yet new and estranged. Rather than denouncing adaptation or imitation, he presents them with quiet clarity, acknowledging their underlying existence in daily life. The exhibition does not claim to offer solutions for freedom. Instead, it creates a space of reflection through its visual propositions. As the artist notes: “This series of works does not judge right or wrong but invites viewers to reconsider themselves within these invisible structures.” In this openness, his work transcends personal narrative and becomes a site for audiences to project their own experiences.

    Ultimately, Tos Suntos’ practice unfolds as both an intimate dialogue with the self and a structural probing of the collective subconscious. While rooted in the cultural soil of Thailand, his art speaks to dilemmas that resonate more broadly today: the tension between faith and doubt, structure and freedom, the individual and the system. By opening up the very frameworks we often take as fixed—such as faith, culture, and class— Tos Suntos reveals what lies beneath them, not certainties, but the unexamined unknowns.

    Venue
    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok, Room 201 – 206, River City Bangkok, 23 Soi Charoenkrung 24, Talad Noi, Sampantawong, Bangkok, 10100 

    Artist
    Tos Suntos

    Exhibition Dates
    October 18 – November 23, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.tangcontemporary.com/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryartbangkok/

    Contact
    bkk@tangcontemporary.com


    About Artist

    Tos Suntos (Panyawat Phitaksawan) (b. 1992, Bangkok, Thailand) is a Thai Artist and Designer known for his unconventional style applied to both his 2D and 3D creations, expressed in a variety of forms such as painting, digital art, collages and sculptures. His works have evolved through time, but consistently combine elements of Thai culture or traditions, with more contemporary and universal elements of monsters and pop culture.

    The artist first gained increased recognition when he was commissioned to create works for the Adidas Headquarters, as a representative of Thailand.  His work has always reflected modern culture and lifestyle, combined with his experience and childhood memories.  When he was young, Tos Suntos was interested in sci-fi films and other worldly creatures, bringing him to incorporate these elements in his work, combined with observations of pop culture and retro styles. 

    About Gallery

    Since its founding in Bangkok in 1997, Tang Contemporary Art has opened 8 spaces in Beijing, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Seoul and Singapore to promote the development of experimental art in different regions. In the past 28 years, Tang Contemporary Art has organized groundbreaking exhibitions in its gallery spaces, and also cooperated with important art institutions in China and abroad to accomplish outstanding art projects. The gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned Tang Contemporary Art internationally renowned recognition, establishing its status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia. 

    As one of China’s most influential contemporary art platforms, Tang Contemporary Art maintains a high standard of exhibition programming. Tang Contemporary Art represents or collaborates with leading figures in international contemporary art, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Shen Yuan, Zhu Jinshi, Chen Danqing, Liu Qinghe, Liu Xiaodong, Chen Shaoxiong, Wang Yuping, Shen Ling, Shen Liang, Wu Yi, Xia Xiaowan, He Duoling, Mao Xuhui, Wang Huangsheng, Yang Jiechang, Tan Ping, Wang Du,Yan Lei, Yue Minjun, Wang Jianwei, Yangjiang Group, Zheng Guogu, Lin Yilin, Sun Yuan&Peng Yu, Qin Ga, Wang Qingsong, Yin Zhaoyang, Feng Yan, Guo Wei, Chen Wenbo, Ling Jian, Qin Qi, Yang Yong, Peng Wei, He An, Zhao Zhao, Xu Qu, Chen Yujun, Chen Yufan, Xue Feng, Cai Lei, Li Qing, Wang Sishun, Xu Xiaoguo, Lí Wei, Liu Yujia, Wu Wei, Yang Bodu, You Yong, Li Erpeng, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Adel Abdessemed, Niki de Saint Phalle, AES+F , Michael Zelehosk, Jonas Burgert, Christian Lemmerz, Michael Kvium, Sakarin Krue-On, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Natee Utarit, Kitti Narod, Gongkan, Entang Wiharso, Heri Dono, Nam June Paik, Park Seungmo, Jae Yong Kim, Diren Lee, Dinh Q. Lê, Rodel Tapaya, Jigger Cruz, Ayka Go, Raffy Napay, H.H.Lim, Etsu Egami, etc.

    (Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)


  • Tang Contemporary Art Presents Everything Is Where It Wasn’t, A Solo Exhibition by Artist TRNZ

    Tang Contemporary Art Presents Everything Is Where It Wasn’t, A Solo Exhibition by Artist TRNZ

    Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art

    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok is proud to present Everything Was Where It Wasn’t, a solo exhibition by Filipino artist TRNZ, curated by Michela Sena. In this new body of work, TRNZ deepens his investigation into the fragile architecture of everyday life, revealing a world in quiet disarray where logic loosens, time folds in on itself, and the familiar slips gently into the unfamiliar.

    In Everything Was Where It Wasn’t, TRNZ unveils a series of new paintings that radiate a subtle, dreamlike sense of displacement. This is not a violent dislocation, but a delicate, suspended condition, one that mirrors the peculiar sensation of dreaming, where meaning drifts, memory fractures, and emotional coherence dissolves. Each canvas seems to hover just outside the frame of narrative time, inviting viewers into a dimension that is both deeply intimate and quietly disoriented, a space where objects repeat with slight variations, moments occur out of sequence, and nothing ever fully resolves.

    At first glance, TRNZ’s visual language, drawn from Japanese animation and graphic storytelling, appears accessible, even playful. Often identified with the new wave of Filipino artists, TRNZ has developed a style rooted in clean lines and visual clarity. But beneath this approachable surface lies a far more elusive and poetic exploration. TRNZ uses the familiar vocabulary of popular visual culture not to simplify, but to complicate. Through this recognizable and stylized lens, he evokes highly nuanced states of being: solitude, displacement, introspection, and emotional ambiguity.

    Arranged Alphabetically, Not by Affection | 150 x 200 cm | Acrylic on canvas | 2025

    His characters often appear suspended in states of quiet hesitation, caught in the spaces between action and reflection. They do not speak; they do not act. They simply are, isolated yet universal, contained within their own atmospheres. In this way, TRNZ masterfully expresses a main condition of contemporary life: the shared isolation that paradoxically connects us all. We are alone and in that aloneness, profoundly together.

    Through subtle distortion and deliberate misplacement, TRNZ destabilizes not only physical environments but also psychological landscapes. Repetition, here, is not used to create rhythm, but to suggest dysfunction, a looping of gestures and forms that once made sense, but no longer do. This is the fatigue of the procedural world, rendered in soft hues and silent composition. Domestic scenes are revisited with slight shifts, introducing an uncanny discomfort. These are not scenes of spectacle, but of suggestion. The rupture is not loud, but internal.

    Low-Maintenance Vertical Garden | 120 x 100 cm | Acrylic on canvas | 2025

    The emotional tone of the work is not explosive, but restrained; and it is in this very restraint that TRNZ achieves his most profound effects. His paintings do not ask for attention, but they hold it. They do not confess, but behave with a quiet persistence that draws the viewer inward. The stillness in his work is never passive; it is charged with suspension, with waiting, with a sense that something unspoken lies just beneath the surface.

    TRNZ does not offer conclusions. Instead, he creates space, intimate, reflective, and deeply human. Through a poetic misordering of time, space, and emotion, he blurs the boundary between the structural and the sentimental. In the gaps between the two, something flickers: vulnerable, displaced, but unmistakably present.

    Studio View of TRNZ

    With Everything Was Where It Wasn’t, TRNZ offers a vision of contemporary life that is both gentle and unflinching. It is a portrait of our emotional terrain, quiet, subtle, disjointed, rendered with remarkable clarity and sensitivity. He does not impose meaning, but allows it to emerge softly, like a memory. In doing so, TRNZ shows us a mirror of ourselves: not as fixed identities, but as fleeting presences, each navigating our own suspended interiors, always close, always apart.

    This exhibition invites viewers into that shared inner landscape, a space without linear time, where forms repeat and meanings slide, where everything is just slightly out of place. A space where, paradoxically, everything is exactly where it wasn’t and yet where we recognize ourselves most clearly.

    Venue
    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok
    Room. 201 – 206
    River City Bangkok
    23 Soi Charoenkrung 24,
    Talad noi, Sampantawong, Bangkok, 10100, Thailand

    Artist
    TRNZ

    Exhibition Dates
    19 July – 24 August 2025

    Opening Reception
    Saturday, 19 July at 4:00 PM

    Contact
    Tel: +662 000 1541
    Email: bkk@tangcontemporary.com


    About the Artist

    TRNZ
    b. 1992, based in the Philippines

    ​Terence Eduarte, better known as TRNZ, is a Filipino visual artist, who holds a BFA in Advertising from the University of Santo Tomas, and began his career as an art director at TBWA/SMP. He was introduced to art through locally dubbed Japanese animation that aired daily on 90s television.  From 2017, he began focusing more on visual artwork with a perspective shaped by his advertising experience, expanding his work to a multimedia approach, and turned to focus more on Fine Arts.  

    TRNZ is an artist with a penchant for mis-arrangement – the past, concepts, emotions, and the intangible. He recontextualizes tangible elements, placing them in unconventional settings where their absurdity defies conventional logic, yet somehow feels as though they belong.  His work explores the instability hidden within the everyday. Through misarrangement, repetition, and subtle shifts, he reconstructs the familiar into scenes where logic falters and meaning bends.

    Working with restrained color and stillness, TRNZ creates images that hold tension quietly, drawing viewers into spaces where memory, control, and contradiction blur. In his hands, dislocation is not rupture, but a quiet, inevitable realignment of how things are seen and held.

    About Tang Contemporary Art

    Since its founding in Bangkok in 1997, Tang Contemporary Art has opened 8 spaces in Beijing, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Seoul and Singapore to promote the development of experimental art in different regions. In the past 28 years, Tang Contemporary Art has organized groundbreaking exhibitions in its gallery spaces, and also cooperated with important art institutions in China and abroad to accomplish outstanding art projects. The gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned Tang Contemporary Art internationally renowned recognition, establishing its status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia. 

    As one of China’s most influential contemporary art platforms, Tang Contemporary Art maintains a high standard of exhibition programming. Tang Contemporary Art represents or collaborates with leading figures in international contemporary art, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Shen Yuan, Zhu Jinshi, Chen Danqing, Liu Qinghe, Liu Xiaodong, Chen Shaoxiong, Wang Yuping, Shen Ling, Shen Liang, Wu Yi, Xia Xiaowan, He Duoling, Mao Xuhui, Wang Huangsheng, Yang Jiechang, Tan Ping, Wang Du,Yan Lei, Yue Minjun, Wang Jianwei, Yangjiang Group, Zheng Guogu, Lin Yilin, Sun Yuan&Peng Yu, Qin Ga, Wang Qingsong, Yin Zhaoyang, Feng Yan, Guo Wei, Chen Wenbo, Ling Jian, Qin Qi, Yang Yong, Peng Wei, He An, Zhao Zhao, Xu Qu, Chen Yujun, Chen Yufan, Xue Feng, Cai Lei, Li Qing, Wang Sishun, Xu Xiaoguo, Lí Wei, Liu Yujia, Wu Wei, Yang Bodu, You Yong, Li Erpeng, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Adel Abdessemed, Niki de Saint Phalle, AES+F , Michael Zelehosk, Jonas Burgert, Christian Lemmerz, Michael Kvium, Sakarin Krue-On, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Natee Utarit, Kitti Narod, Gongkan, Entang Wiharso, Heri Dono, Nam June Paik, Park Seungmo, Jae Yong Kim, Diren Lee, Dinh Q. Lê, Rodel Tapaya, Jigger Cruz, Ayka Go, Raffy Napay, H.H.Lim, Etsu Egami, etc.

    (Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)


  • Tang Contemporary Art Presents Petit Genre, a Solo Exhibition by ERTHH

    Tang Contemporary Art Presents Petit Genre, a Solo Exhibition by ERTHH

    Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art

    Tang Contemporary Art is pleased to announce the representation of Thai artist ERTHH and will present his solo exhibition “Petit Genre” at our Bangkok space on June 7.  Born in 2000 in Bangkok, ERTHH demonstrates artistic maturity beyond his years through vibrant pop-surrealist works that offer fresh perspectives. His paintings feature “Cheek,” a character reflecting his personal journey—though depicted with serene composure, this figure embodies the artist’s own emotional landscapes, with each detail concealing untold narratives.

    “​​Lately I’ve come to value the importance of learning through life itself. I used to believe that age wasn’t a measure of wisdom, anyone who was curious and eager to learn could grow to understand the world more deeply than someone older. But as I grew up, I realized there are things that no amount of reading or studying can teach me. That thing is experience.

    Life teaches us through events we can’t find in any book. Each day brings a deeper understanding of the world and the people around us. Mistakes, achievements, the good and the bad all become lessons stored within us.

    I’ve started to understand that the version of myself today will never be wiser than the version of myself in the future, because every experience adds perspective. It helps me see more clearly, decide more carefully, and respond more wisely. And none of that comes without living through it. I think we never stop learning and what we go through in life shapes who we become.”

    ——ERTHH

    Still That Kid, 2025, Oil on linen, 120 x 200 cm

    Social behaviors within everyday practice follow specific discursive rules that govern how people process objects and their symbols, while daily culture itself cleverly uses its own surface as a curtain, obscuring the pluralistic contexts, inherent qualities, and sociohistorical foundations underpinning its operations. As visual footnotes to globalization, ERTHH’s works create spatial interventions at the threshold between objects and humanity. His studio resembles Baudrillard’s “museum of simulacra,” where enlarged cartoon toys, snack packaging, and replicated art sculptures form an archaeology of memory. The recurrent motif of wide-eyed Asian children in ERTHH’s oeuvre functions as potent visual symbols.

    On ERTHH’s cognitive journey from “painting as play” to worldmaking, each viewer becomes the cartoon child—milk teeth still hidden beneath business suits. His works remind us: those glowing pebbles scattered along the path may one day become existential coordinates in turbulent seas. In this sense, daily practice breaks free from being a “structured structure”—its fluid fragments suddenly developing into latent “deities of resistance” hiding in life’s folds. Their divinity lies not in grand manifestos but in humble gestures that anchor existential resilience within objectification’s cracks, puncturing homogeneity’s dome to reveal glimmers of alternative possibilities.

    Text: Shiying Wang

    Opening Reception
    June 7, 2025 | Saturday 4:00 PM

    Venue
    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok 

    Artist
    ERTHH

    Exhibition Dates
    June 7 – July 13, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday |  11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.tangcontemporary.com

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryart/

    Contact
    bkk@tangcontemporary.com

    About Artist

    ERTHH (Thanathorn Phattaratada)
    b.2000, Bangkok, Thailand

    Thanathorn Phattarathada, better known as ERTHH, graduated from the Faculty of Decorative Arts at Silpakorn University in 2022.

    ERTHH is inspired by Thai master, Prateep Kochabua, known for his surrealist paintings, as well as inspired by his study and interest in Caravaggio’s use of light and shadow, frequently experimenting with techniques of chiaroscuro.  He practiced still life compositions and then gradually started to integrate elements of his upbringing and passion for cartoons and illustrations, eventually forming his unique style and canvases.

    Young and energetic, while exuding an air of maturity beyond his age, ERTHH creates pop surrealist paintings with a fresh take, illustrating a character that reflects on his own learning experiences.  Though the boy “Cheek” is expressed in a calm and quiet manner, he represents both the artist’s highs and lows.  Beneath each detail is a story that is waiting to be unfolded.

    About Tang Contemporary Art

    Since its founding in Bangkok in 1997, Tang Contemporary Art has opened 8 spaces in Beijing, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Seoul and Singapore to promote the development of experimental art in different regions. In the past 27 years, Tang Contemporary Art has organized groundbreaking exhibitions in its gallery spaces, and also cooperated with important art institutions in China and abroad to accomplish outstanding art projects. The gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned Tang Contemporary Art internationally renowned recognition, establishing its status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia. 

    As one of China’s most influential contemporary art platforms, Tang Contemporary Art maintains a high standard of exhibition programming. Tang Contemporary Art represents or collaborates with leading figures in international contemporary art, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Shen Yuan, Zhu Jinshi, Chen Danqing, Liu Qinghe, Liu Xiaodong, Chen Shaoxiong, Wang Yuping, Shen Ling, Shen Liang, Wu Yi, Xia Xiaowan, He Duoling, Mao Xuhui, Wang Huangsheng, Yang Jiechang, Tan Ping, Wang Du,Yan Lei, Yue Minjun, Wang Jianwei, Yangjiang Group, Zheng Guogu, Lin Yilin, Sun Yuan&Peng Yu, Qin Ga, Wang Qingsong, Yin Zhaoyang, Feng Yan, Guo Wei, Chen Wenbo, Ling Jian, Qin Qi, Yang Yong, Peng Wei, He An, Zhao Zhao, Xu Qu, Chen Yujun, Chen Yufan, Xue Feng, Cai Lei, Li Qing, Wang Sishun, Xu Xiaoguo, Lí Wei, Liu Yujia, Wu Wei, Yang Bodu, You Yong, Li Erpeng, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Adel Abdessemed, Niki de Saint Phalle, AES+F , Michael Zelehosk, Jonas Burgert, Christian Lemmerz, Michael Kvium, Sakarin Krue-On, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Natee Utarit, Kitti Narod, Gongkan, Entang Wiharso, Heri Dono, Nam June Paik, Park Seungmo, Jae Yong Kim, Diren Lee, Dinh Q. Lê, Rodel Tapaya, Jigger Cruz, Ayka Go, Raffy Napay, H.H.Lim, Etsu Egami, etc.

    (Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)


  • Tang Contemporary Art Presents Failure as Fuel: On Berbrain’s Embrace of the Uncertain by Bernandi Desanda

    Tang Contemporary Art Presents Failure as Fuel: On Berbrain’s Embrace of the Uncertain by Bernandi Desanda

    Poster Credit: Tang Contemporary Art

    Tang Contemporary Art proudly presents Berbrain’s first solo exhibition in Bangkok, Failure as Fuel: On Berbrain’s Embrace of the Uncertain. Working primarily with oil, pigment sticks, solid markers, and spray on canvas, Berbrain constructs fragmented, open-ended narratives that privilege process over resolution. His works function not as definitive statements, but as moments suspended within an ongoing, evolving story. By capturing scenes that resemble the aftermath or midpoint of a battlefield, Berbrain leaves viewers questioning: what happened? What’s next? Has something failed, or succeeded? The artist refuses to offer clear outcomes, instead inviting the audience to participate in redefining what success or failure might mean.

    In a culture that celebrates clarity and completion, failure remains one of the most radical ideas for an artist to explore. We’re conditioned to view failure as a fall, a flaw, a deviation from the ideal. But what if failure is not the opposite of success, but its necessary companion? What if that detour is where the real work begins? Berbrain does not treat failure as defeat but frames it as possibility. His practice begins with questions: What does it mean to face fear head-on? What happens when we lean into uncertainty, rather than escape it? His paintings carry the quiet, charged energy of risk—not the dramatic kind that demands attention, but the everyday courage to continue without knowing the outcome.

    Sanctuary of Dreams, 2025, Mixed media on canvas, 200 x 200 cm

    This exhibition collapses the binary between failure and success. Berbrain’s visual language, rich with dreamlike symbols, dynamic gestures, and bodies mid-metamorphosis, suggests that to be alive is to be in flux. Nothing is settled. Every failure carries the seed of a new direction, a new question, a new possibility. Far from a collapse, failure becomes a space of rehearsal, invention, and play. In Berbrain’s universe, falling short is a strategy, not a setback. It is in the friction of effort—the slips, the doubts, the internal monsters—that something real takes shape. Fear runs parallel throughout these works, not cast aside or conquered, but absorbed into the process. Fear becomes material: a starting point rather than a stop sign. Whether exploring internal struggles or fantastical worlds where danger and joy intertwine, Berbrain treats fear as a source of momentum rather than paralysis.

    This is not an exhibition about overcoming failure. It’s about staying with it long enough to understand what it reveals. It’s about embracing the uncertain not in spite of its difficulty, but because of it. Berbrain’s work speaks to a shared condition in contemporary life: the demand to appear confident, composed, and perpetually successful. His art cuts through that illusion, creating space for the unspoken—fear of falling, the weight of trying again, and the strength it takes to risk vulnerability in public. The paintings offer not just reflection, but invitation. They suggest that failure might not be something to avoid but something to move toward. That within conscious, wholehearted failure lies a form of freedom that conventional success cannot provide. Berbrain’s art offers space: to feel, to question, to fall and get up again. In this, the work does not merely represent failure—it reclaims it.

    Opening Reception
    April 26, Saturday | 4:00 PM

    Venue
    Room. 201 – 206, River City Bangkok, 23 Soi Charoenkrung 24, Talad noi, Sampantawong,Bangkok,10100, Thailand

    Artist
    Bernandi Desanda

    Exhibition Dates
    April 26 – June 1, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.tangcontemporary.com

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryart/

    Contact
    bkk@tangcontemporary.com

    About the Artist

    Bernandi Desanda (Berbrain)
    b.1996, Tangerang, Indonesia

    Bernandi Desanda or Berbrain was graduated from Indonesian Institute of The Arts, Yogyakarta, Faculty of Design, Department of Visual Communication Design in 2021.

    Since 2015, Bernandi has chosen to focus on visual arts, particularly painting. After graduating, Bernandi decided to pursue a career as a full time artist and currently lived in Yogyakarta.

    He is also recognized as Berbrain. He is an artist whose creative journey is rooted in imagination, The name “Berbrain” encapsulates the notion of “Bernandi’s thoughts,” elegantly combining ‘Ber’ and ‘Brain’. An undeniable passion for animals, monsters, and all things uncanny courses through Berbrain’s creative veins. 

    This fervor consistently finds its expression in the art he produces today, a majority of which draws inspiration from these captivating realms. Notably, the enchanting universe of cartoon characters also contributes to the tapestry of his creations. It’s within this artistic landscape that Bernandi skillfully weaves together the essence of monsters, animals, and animated personas, breathing life into a symphony of new and captivating species.

    About Tang Contemporary Art

    Since its founding in Bangkok in 1997, Tang Contemporary Art has opened 8 spaces in Beijing, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Seoul and Singapore to promote the development of experimental art in different regions. In the past 27 years, Tang Contemporary Art has organized groundbreaking exhibitions in its gallery spaces, and also cooperated with important art institutions in China and abroad to accomplish outstanding art projects. The gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned Tang Contemporary Art internationally renowned recognition, establishing its status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia. 

    As one of China’s most influential contemporary art platforms, Tang Contemporary Art maintains a high standard of exhibition programming. Tang Contemporary Art represents or collaborates with leading figures in international contemporary art, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Shen Yuan, Zhu Jinshi, Chen Danqing, Liu Qinghe, Liu Xiaodong, Chen Shaoxiong, Wang Yuping, Shen Ling, Shen Liang, Wu Yi, Xia Xiaowan, He Duoling, Mao Xuhui, Wang Huangsheng, Yang Jiechang, Tan Ping, Wang Du,Yan Lei, Yue Minjun, Wang Jianwei, Yangjiang Group, Zheng Guogu, Lin Yilin, Sun Yuan&Peng Yu, Qin Ga, Wang Qingsong, Yin Zhaoyang, Feng Yan, Guo Wei, Chen Wenbo, Ling Jian, Qin Qi, Yang Yong, Peng Wei, He An, Zhao Zhao, Xu Qu, Chen Yujun, Chen Yufan, Xue Feng, Cai Lei, Li Qing, Wang Sishun, Xu Xiaoguo, Lí Wei, Liu Yujia, Wu Wei, Yang Bodu, You Yong, Li Erpeng, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Adel Abdessemed, Niki de Saint Phalle, AES+F , Michael Zelehosk, Jonas Burgert, Christian Lemmerz, Michael Kvium, Sakarin Krue-On, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Natee Utarit, Kitti Narod, Gongkan, Entang Wiharso, Heri Dono, Nam June Paik, Park Seungmo, Jae Yong Kim, Diren Lee, Dinh Q. Lê, Rodel Tapaya, Jigger Cruz, Ayka Go, Raffy Napay, H.H.Lim, Etsu Egami, etc.

    (Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)