In this series of paintings, the artist doesn’t just sketch fur or bone. They map something else entirely: the unspoken bond between species, the ache of being unseen, the warmth that follows being held. Inspired by animals left behind, these works don’t shout. They murmur. They ask gentle, devastating things – ‘Have I ever been loved?’ – and still, they refuse to accuse. What emerges is not pity, but reverence. A soft insistence that even in ruin, affection remains. 20 percent of the proceeds support The Hope Thailand Foundation. Until July 31. Free. Alexgust Gallery, MMAD at MunMun Srinakarin, 10.30am-9.30pm
Second week of July. The sky still can't make up its mind – overcast, sulking, hinting at rain but never quite committing. The kind of weather that keeps you checking your phone for forecasts that lie. Still, it's dry ‘enough’, and that counts for something. Before the streets turn slick and umbrellas bloom like mushrooms, there’s a weekend to be had.
Start with caffeine. The tenth edition of Thailand Coffee Fest returns with its usual procession of grinders, brewers, baristas, roasters and the jittery faithful who love them. Over 200 vendors, talks, workshops, competition nerves and more coffee than anyone sane should consume. Somewhere between the tastings and the lectures, you might realise you’ve been treating your morning cup all wrong.
If your idea of worship leans less filter, more flair, then Voices of Broadway might be the necessary pivot. A concert of belted dreams and Side B heartbreaks – Les Mis, Wicked, Hadestown – and quieter songs that rarely get centre stage. The stories behind the songs may cut deeper than the notes themselves.
Those with more warehouse than West End in their blood can drift to the Warehouse Flea Market, where grills sizzle, shirts clash and nothing matches until you take it home. Koji's skewers, WAGRill’s smoky bravado, THE WORN’s lived-in tailoring – it’s curated chaos in the best way.
And for the night owls, there’s ShioriyBradshaw. Tokyo-rooted, globally wired, her set doesn’t demand your attention – it seduces it. Joined by Bangkok’s Genji and Sriracha Czaddy, this is where things unravel gently, then all at once.
It might rain. It might not. Either way, July’s second act is already in motion. You just have to show up.
Get ahead of the game and start planning your month with our list of the top things to do this July.
Get your cultural calendar fixed with art exhibitions this July.