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ต่างประเทศ

Sleeping with Art: Bangkok hotel transforms guest rooms into immersive dreamscapes

Thai PBS World

อัพเดต 8 นาทีที่แล้ว • เผยแพร่ 1 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา • Thai PBS World

Art exhibitions have officially broken out of the gallery white cube. If you wander onto the 11th and 12th floors of KROMO Bangkok, Curio Collection by Hilton this weekend, you won’t find sterile white walls or hushed corridors. Instead, you will stroll through 36 guest rooms completely transformed into living contemporary art galleries for the Hotel Art Fair (HAF) 2026.

Running from June 5-7, 2026, the 9th edition of the fair invites the city’s creative crowd to experience art in its natural habitat: a lived-in lifestyle where visitors can drift from one room to another, connecting directly with artists, galleries and fellow art lovers on a deeply personal level.

The luxury of unfiltered imagination

This year’s overarching theme, “REM – Return to the Imaginative”, addresses a very modern dilemma. In a world dictated by data, structure, algorithmic speed and negative vibes, the space for pure, unfiltered human imagination has shrunk.

The “REM state”—the phase of sleep where the mind crafts vivid dreams completely unburdened by logic—serves as the creative blueprint for the entire fair.

“The Hotel Art Fair transforms two floors of hotel space into accessible art exhibitions that naturally become part of people’s lives,” says Varinda Thienachariya, founder of FARMGROUP and the mastermind behind HAF

The hospitality format is more than just an aesthetic choice; it’s an incredibly fluid logistical model. Vanida notes that the hotel setup creates a seamless ecosystem. Galleries manage their own designated suites, locking up with their own keycards at night, which keeps operations lean and decentralized. In return, the host hotel gains highly specialized, creative PR visibility.

“When we see the positive feedback from the artists, the galleries, and the tangible impact on regional tourism, we know this model is working,” she adds with a smile.

If you are planning your route through KROMO Bangkok’s labyrinth of wonders, these three distinct artistic statements are on the list you should not miss.

The raw intimacy of ‘POD’

In what is easily the crown jewel of this year’s celebrity-curated spaces, iconic Modern Dog frontman Thanachai “Pod” Ujjin presents his first-ever solo art exhibition inside an intimate private room. This is also the first time he is exhibiting his new abstract portrait works.

Sitting casually on the edge of the bed surrounded by raw, expressive abstract portrait works on paper, Pod utilizes instinctive brushwork to map his internal psyche. Pieces like his portrait of The Devil Wears Prada or his evocative Michael Jackson capture immediate, real-time emotional currents from his life.

“My favourite is my self-portrait,” he tells Thai PBS World, pointing to a portrait in which he wears a Paradox band’s signature mask.

“For me, art is a tool for conversing with myself, untangling my emotions, and healing internally. It’s a form of therapy and detoxification,” Pod explains.

“Art never lies because every line and every color honestly reflect our emotional state in that particular moment. In my interpretation, the REM state is a personal fantasy space where we can fully release our emotions.”

The living mirror of ‘Saturday Painters’

For an experience that sheds the stuffy, academic pretence of the traditional art market, visit the double-room takeover by the Saturday Painters collective. Led by contemporary artist and founder of ARTIST+RUN GALLERY, Angkrit Ajchariyasophon, this space functions less like an exhibition and more like an open, multi-generational weekend house party.

To keep the energy fluid, the group decided to completely change the displayed artworks on the walls and beds every single day.

The curation offers a brilliant study in contrasts: the meditative, layered abstract color blocks of Germany-based master Somyot Hananuntasuk, side-by-side with the rebellious, highly tactile impasto oil works of Mit Jai Inn—pieces that viewers are actively encouraged to touch, roll up, or sit on.

“Art is like a magic mirror,” Angkrit notes. “It doesn't just reflect physical reality. It reflects the mind, thoughts, and emotions of both the creator and the viewer. It is a Doraemon portal that lets us step through to explore the psyche of an era and see ourselves as human beings living together in society.”

The contemporary shrine of 'MAEWKHOO'

For a brilliant intersection of local spiritual folklore and hyper-modern global design, step into the room designed by Dennis Karlsson, the multidisciplinary mind behind the cult brand MAEWKHOO. Karlsson has converted a standard luxury bedroom into a contemporary shrine.

The showstopper here is ‘Dok Mai Jao,’ a massive, four-meter-tall polished aluminum sculpture inspired by the animistic energies of Koh Phangan. Its mirror-like surfaces constantly morph, reflecting the shifting Bangkok daylight and the silhouettes of passing guests, urging onlookers to stop trying to intellectually “understand” the work and simply feel it.

A Vital Engine for Bangkok’s Creative Economy

Beyond providing a sophisticated weekend sanctuary for local design enthusiasts, Hotel Art Fair serves as a heavy-hitting economic driver. Pattanachai Singhavara, Director of the Southern Regional Office of the Thailand Convention & Exhibition Bureau (TCEB), says the fair is highly effective at attracting affluent, younger international travelers to the capital. With attendees staying an average of ten days and injecting significant capital into the local economy, HAF continues to solidify Bangkok’s reputation as Southeast Asia’s ultimate creative destination.

Pattanachai Singhavara, Director of the Southern Regional Office of the Thailand Convention and Exhibition Bureau (TCEB), says HAF is a powerful engine for the creative economy. A single past edition injected a massive 74.4 million baht into circulation. The fair has proven remarkably adept at drawing high-spending, younger international travelers to the city, with visitors staying an average of ten days and spending roughly THB 58,839 per person per trip.

Whether you are looking to purchase your very first original piece to hang at home, connect directly with Thai creators, or simply want to spend your weekend leisurely, HAF could be an event worth your time.

By Veena Thoopkrajae

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