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The third and final edition of Ghost 2568: Wish We Were Here gathers over 30 artists whose works speak in fragments, melodies and spectral gestures

Contemporary art has a strange way of appearing just when a city starts to lose its sense of self. It slips through the cracks – between glass towers and back alleys – reminding us that culture isn’t a luxury but a survival instinct. In Bangkok, that reminder takes shape as Ghost 2568: Wish We Were Here, a month-long art festival that doesn’t just exhibit work, it disturbs the air around it.
This month marks the final act of Ghost, the video and performance art series that’s haunted Bangkok since 2018. Curated by Amal Khalaf, Wish We Were Here gathers more than 30 artists whose works speak in fragments, melodies and spectral gestures that refuse to fade.
From October 15-November 15, Ghost spreads across eight venues – an art trail stretching from boxing rings to galleries, temples of reflection to late-night experiments. The first two curators, Christina Li and Korakrit Arunanondchai, return with their own afterlives of ideas, joined by Pongsakorn Yananissorn, who brings back Host, a learning platform that doesn’t teach so much as listen.
This year’s theme feels like a sigh caught mid-song – a hymn to survival in cities that keep swallowing their own stories. Along the Chao Phraya, artists trace what’s been erased: a memory of belonging, a shared language, a body that no longer fits the shape of its past. Ghost isn’t tidy. It’s about what remains when the lights go down and what resists when everything else moves on.
Here’s what to keep an eye on:
From the river’s edge to the city’s restless heart, Ghost 2568 feels like a collective exhale – one last gathering before the silence settles.
October 15-November 15. Free admission.
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