Showing 1-10 of 21 results
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Strange visions of Bangkok
Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 27/01/2018
» Bob Stratton is one of the few people who actually like Bangkok’s tangle of electrical wires.
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The virtuous one
Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 14/04/2017
» Liam Cunningham is quite a funny bunny -- a stark opposite of the character he is best known for portraying: Game Of Thrones' dependably virtuous knight, Ser Davos Seaworth. While in Bangkok earlier this month, he unflinchingly munched the head off fried insects at the street stall and gleefully admitted to nicking tiny props from the set every year, be it the small wooden stag or coins from Braavos. He asks the props man first of course, and most of it ends up on his daughter's "wall of awesome" in her bedroom.
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The looks of love
Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 08/09/2016
» It's a season of fashion exhibitions and every dreamy wild child's shoo-in favourite, Sretsis, also follows suit for autumn/winter 2016. The local superbrand won't be hosting a fashion show this fall -- they've opted instead to introduce their new collection in an exhibition that's nothing short of stunning.
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The dark side
Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 22/06/2015
» Amrita Tripathi, 34, was the youngest speaker at last month's Festival of India in Thailand, bringing a modern insight on the country. While her first book, Broken News, was a piece of fiction about a newsroom's not so glittering drama, her latest work, Sibius Knot, is a heavier novel that addresses mental health, dysfunctional families and being in a cult without even realising it.
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The beginning anticipates the end
Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 21/01/2015
» Photos in San Francisco-based artist Stephen Albair's new book, The Beginning Anticipates The End The End Anticipates the Beginning, are a visual journey that only takes natural sunlight, a 42-year-old Nikon and lots of knick-knacks.
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Across the universe
Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 12/01/2015
» Tunlaya Dunnvatanachit on the beautiful, but dark, bubble known as the world.
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For the love of bread
Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 25/08/2014
» 'Carb slave" is one easy way to describe Phimrak "Tle" Chaikul. The fresh-out-of-the-oven author of Let Me Eat Bread reckons the reason she loves bread so much is probably because she hasn't come across bad-tasting bread, yet.
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When art comes naturally
Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 30/07/2014
» Things worked out perfectly for Yanawit Kunchaethong’s exhibition “Print from Paa Sa-nguan”, which features prints made with colours extracted from forest plants. After all, the 108-rai forest in Petchaburi in which he sourced his materials is owned by his family. Helping him further, knowledge and love for plants and trees have been instilled in Yanawit since he was young by his father, Sa-nguan, and mother, who even visited the forest while she was pregnant with him. His father’s name, in fact, also serves as a pun in the exhibition’s title, referring to both a conserved and the family’s forest.
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Inside warring Westeros
Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 14/07/2014
» Blood and boobs can be enough to disorient any viewer, but even without all that, Game Of Thrones may be for some, about the most confusing series ever without its illustrative opening sequence. Thanks to the countless cities and honourable (ahem) houses that rule over them, keeping track of the characters and locations almost require note-taking and a session on Wikipedia post-watching.
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For the fun and cheerful
Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 07/07/2014
» Bun Books, the new, cutesy younger sister of Banlue Publications, rolls out new illustration-orientated reads
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