Off The Map
Photograph: Off The Map | The best things to do in bangkok this weekend
Photograph: Off The Map

The best things to do in Bangkok this weekend (June 4-7)

Free films, fresh exhibitions and plenty of excuses to get out

Kaweewat Siwanartwong
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A long holiday finally gives Bangkok a little room to breath. The city slows down, inboxes stay unopened a little longer and weekend plans don't have to work quite so hard. The extended break does mean a lighter events calendar than usual, but there are still enough gems out there for anyone willing to leave the sofa.

This week’s picks move from contemporary art and vintage fashion to classic cinema and late-night dancing. Catch Taiwanese artist Yu Chuan Chang turning Bangkok’s familiar flower garlands into meditative paintings at Stillness in Bloom, step inside Filipino sculptor Jinggoy Buensuceso’s immersive Cosmic Bloom at Luenrit, or spend an evening treasure-hunting at Fazhcon V.3, where more than 300 vendors take over a former riverside tobacco warehouse on Charoenkrung.

If the rain clouds roll in, Bangkok City Library’s free classic film screenings make a very civilised escape, with landmark Thai productions including Santi-Vina and Forever Yours on the programme. Once the sun goes down, Detroit minimal techno veteran Daniel Bell lands at Bar Temp., while Off The Map keeps Thursdays moving with heartbreak anthems and 90s throwbacks. Not the busiest weekend of the year, maybe, but a surprisingly good one all the same.

Map out the rest of June with our guide to what’s on, and keep an eye on our picks of Bangkok’s best things to do.

Map out the rest of the month with our guide to what’s on, and keep an eye on our picks of Bangkok’s best things to do.

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What's on this weekend?

  • Things to do
  • Surawong

Bangkok’s humble flower garland takes on a new form in Stillness in Bloom, a solo exhibition by Taiwanese artist Yu Chuan Chang. Drawing on a sight found all over the city, Chang creates contemporary paintings that move between Eastern and Western artistic traditions while reflecting on beauty’s short life. His blooms stay forever at their peak, suspended in paint long after their real-life counterparts fade.

Presented as a Garland of Eternity dedicated to Bangkok, the works weave together time, memory and emotion. Layer upon layer of pigment works almost like needle and thread, binding petals to canvas with quiet precision. If a garland’s meaning comes from accepting impermanence, Chang’s paintings offer a softer counterpoint: preserving one perfect moment and letting it linger.

May 23-July 12. Free entry. Maison JE Bangkok. 11am-7pm

Drag your Thursday crowd to Off The Map for live heartbreak singalongs

Bangkok’s after-work crowd gets a new reason to stay out on Thursdays. Off The Map, the nightlife spot tucked between Thonglor and Ekkamai, launches Thursday Sessions, a weekly series running until the end of June that swaps predictable nights out for themed evenings built around live music.

The programme alternates between two moods. Heartbreak House is for tear-stained singalongs, pairing Thai favourites with international breakup classics usually reserved for solo listening. On alternate weeks, 90s Night rewinds the clock with Thai and global hits for anyone old enough to remember the decade first time around. Expect live bands rather than DJs, plus Regency and beer buffets, alongside buy-one-get-one cocktail deals every Thursday.

Every Thursday until the end of June. Free entry. Off The Map. 7pm onwards

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  • Things to do
  • Events & Festivals

H0M0HAUS starts as an open artistic home, welcoming all genders and identities whilst using art to connect lived stories, shared histories and the emotional weight of right now. After two previous editions, the festival's back in 2026 with a sharper focus, asking audiences to really look at the body and confront patriarchal structures through performance. 

Now in its third run, the theme ‘The Last: Radical Reincarnation’ centres on renewal after rupture. It traces what happens when silence breaks, when something once suppressed finds its voice again, and how pain can shift to become a catalyst for making. The idea reflects an ongoing reality. Across the region, people of diverse genders still negotiate rights, freedoms and dignity, often facing scrutiny despite legal progress like Thailand's move towards marriage equality.

H0M0HAUS #3 takes place from June 5-14 across multiple Bangkok venues including Bangkok Art and Culture Centre and Goethe-Institut Thailand, alongside Phahonyothin Rama, Buffalo Bridge GalleryAngoon GardenPoA White Box and One Bangkok. Register and grab tickets via here.

  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

Yaowarat welcomes the Bangkok debut of Filipino artist and sculptor Jinggoy Buensuceso with Cosmic Bloom, an immersive solo exhibition taking over Luenrit. Known as one of the Philippines’ leading contemporary sculptors, Buensuceso builds large-scale installations from industrial materials, shaping them through an origami-inspired visual language that explores motion, tension and constant change.

Spread across multiple levels, Cosmic Bloom follows a journey of entry, expansion and release. Here, sculpture becomes an environment to move through rather than something viewed from a distance. The result is a striking exploration of perception, consciousness and our place within the wider universe.

June 4-July 28. Free entry. Luenrit Yaowarat. 9am-5pm

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  • Things to do
  • Ekamai

Seven years is a long run in Bangkok nightlife, and CHUNN marks the occasion with an anniversary party at CHUNNPLAY Ekkamai\. What began as a neighbourhood hangout has spent the past seven years serving food, pouring drinks and soundtracking plenty of late nights, building a loyal crowd along the way. 

The celebration keeps things simple: music, dancing and familiar faces. The lineup features DJs Kurrypup, Ekception and Meltmode, while Thai artist and performer Gene Kasidit takes the stage for a live set. Entry is B300 and includes a complimentary drink, making this one very easy to add to your Saturday plans.

June 6. B300 at the door. CHUNNPLAY. 7pm onwards

  • Things to do
  • Charoenkrung

Bangkok’s vintage crowd has a date with Fazhcon V.3, which returns for its biggest edition yet. This time the gathering takes over Nic Factory on Charoenkrung 74, a former riverside tobacco warehouse that now serves as one of the neighbourhood’s more intriguing creative spaces, with views over the Chao Phraya.

More than 300 carefully selected vendors set up shop across the venue, offering everything from hard-to-find second-hand gems and archive pieces to independent fashion labels and streetwear brought by sellers from Thailand and the US. New additions include the event’s first-ever fashion show, alongside live performances from four well-loved alternative music acts.

June 6-7. B200 at the door. Nic Factory. 5pm-midnight

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  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

Maitri Chit Project welcomes a true underground veteran this month as Daniel Bell takes over the decks. A key figure in minimal techno for more than three decades, Bell remains a regular fixture at Europe’s most respected clubs, including Frankfurt institution Robert Johnson and Berlin’s legendary Tresor, where he recently appeared as part of the venue’s 35th anniversary celebrations.

Bell recently launched Beyond a series of marathon open-to-close performances staged at selected clubs around the world. Joining him on the bill are local selectors Sarayu and Elaheh, rounding out a night geared towards dancers who prefer the deeper end of electronic music.

June 6. B400 via here and B600 at the door. Bar Temp.. 9pm onwards

  • Things to do
  • Phrom Phong

FV launches its first artist residency exhibition with new work by Deborah Metsch, created following a four-week stay in Bangkok. During her residency, the artist works closely with the Atelier Pichita team, exploring Thai textile traditions, local craftsmanship and contemporary design through research, experimentation and creative exchange.

The resulting exhibition brings together collaborative pieces that sit between art and fashion. Rather than simply borrowing visual cues from clothing, Metsch develops a conversation with Pichita’s celebrated approach to embellishment and the female silhouette. Beading, fabric and structural details reappear as layered compositions, where transparency, texture and tension echo the rituals of dressing and adornment.

May 24-June 20. Free entry. FV39. 11am-7pm

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  • Things to do
  • Rattanakosin

June’s wet-weather forecast comes with a silver lining. Bangkok City Library in Phra Nakhon spends the month revisiting some of Thailand’s most significant cinematic treasures through a programme of free classic film screenings.

The selection includes Santi-Vina (1954), the first Thai production to win an international prize, alongside enduring titles such as Forever Yours (1955), Hell Hotel (1957) and Sugar Is Not Sweet (1964). Many of these films hold a place in Thailand’s national film heritage, making this a rare chance to catch them on the big screen. Bring a national ID card or passport, grab a seat and spend a few hours in another era.

June 7, 14, 21 and 28. Theater Room, Bangkok City Library. 4pm onwards

  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

An entire Akha house now stands in the middle of Bangkok, carefully dismantled from a village in northern Thailand and rebuilt piece by piece inside an art gallery. Roof panels, woven bedding, timber floors and weathered household objects all carry marks of the people who once lived among them, quietly tracing a way of life that grows more fragile with each passing generation.

The Akha are an Indigenous ethnic group whose communities are spread across the mountains of northern Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and southern China, known for their intricate textiles, spiritual rituals and deep connection to land and ancestry. In recent decades, migration, tourism and rapid development have reshaped many of those traditions. Through memory, craftsmanship and personal histories, The Preservation of Fire by Busui Ajaw keeps those stories alive a little longer.

May 15-November 1. Free entry. Bangkok Kunsthalle. 2pm-8pm

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  • Things to do
  • Charoenkrung

Factories, pipelines and scarred coastlines sit at the centre of this striking photography exhibition by Sukrit Patjuntadusit, which examines the environmental cost carried by Rayong Province. Human presence lingers quietly throughout the series, whether through industrial structures, contaminated water or damaged landscapes altered over time. What sets the show apart is Sukrit’s use of the ‘film soup’ technique. Wastewater gathered from real industrial sites becomes part of the film development process itself, allowing chemicals to stain, corrode and warp the negatives. Pollution doesn’t simply appear as subject matter here – it physically reshapes the photographs. A free documentary screening and discussion session also takes place on Saturday June 6 from 1pm to 3pm.

Now-June 23. Free entry. 2/F, Fotoclub BKK. 11am-8pm

  • Things to do
  • Prawet

MunMun Srinakarin opens MMAD Gallery with six exhibitions from the first artists selected through the MMADness is Calling project, giving emerging names space to experiment across installation, sculpture, sound and textiles. Psyche and Flesh turns suffering and memory into tactile forms, while Upper’s What Lies on Top of the Mountain pairs animation, towering canvases and atmospheric audio to unpack the awkward quiet after intimacy. Elsewhere, Jhanyar’s 24/7 Objects reframes Bangkok’s pavements and everyday clutter with a sharply observant eye for city life. Steam Stream drifts through water and rice fields, Sunburn The Kid reconstructs discarded fabric into new textile works and Fish Are Friends introduces scrap-metal fish puppets for anyone carrying around a little low-level loneliness.

May 7-June 21. Free. MMAD GALLERY. 11am-7pm

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  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

Bangkok Kunsthalle welcomes Brooklyn-based Thai collective Elekhlekha as its latest artists-in-residence, turning the space into a constantly shifting laboratory for sound, storytelling and live visual experimentation. Running across two months, the residency unfolds through research sessions, performances and collaborative installations. One standout arrives with Lomwong, an open-studio collaboration featuring Thai musicians and artists working inside immersive surround sound, moving floor projections and a Yamaha Disklavier piano sitting directly at the centre of the room.

May 23, 31, June 13 and 20. Free. Bangkok Kunsthalle. 1pm-4pm

  • Things to do
  • Siam

Inner Spectrum slows things down considerably, gathering abstract and semi-abstract works from five artists interested less in explanation than emotional residue. Across layered textures, shifting compositions and large stretches of deliberate emptiness, the exhibition explores memory, anxiety and the mental static modern life leaves hanging around our heads. There’s no polished escapism here, thankfully. Just uncertainty, silence and room to sit with both.

May 23-June 12. Free. Art Jewel Gallery, Siam Paragon. 10am-10pm

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  • Things to do
  • Siam

First staged in Cheongju Craft Biennale, this group exhibition arrives in Bangkok following a debut as the Invited Country Pavilion in Cheongju, South Korea. The project grows from an ongoing exchange between Thailand and the Republic of Korea, setting craft alongside contemporary art across Southeast and East Asia. At its core sits ‘Elastic Time’, a curatorial thread that questions how time behaves across the region. Forget neat timelines. Here, past, present and future overlap, repeat and quietly reshape one another. The Cheongju edition sets the tone as a cross-cultural conversation, where material, process and memory carry equal weight. Artists approach craft not as something fixed, but as a way to consider what unfolds now, and what might come next.

Until August 16. Free. Jim Thompson Art Center. 10am-6pm

  • Things to do
  • Siam

sits firmly in the category of places you keep having to return to. But this time, it feels different. The concept leans on the ocean after dark, when sunlight disappears and whole ecosystems carry on unseen. You wander through shifting light, sometimes above the waterline, sometimes beneath it, with bioluminescent creatures flickering softly around you. Details keep catching your eye. A neon wall answers your touch with imagined marine life. Seahorses glow under tinted light, rainforest corners bloom with luminous flora, and a quiet full moon hangs over goldfish. In the shark tunnel, silver ripples mimic night tides, while Gentoo penguins stand beneath drifting northern lights. Even the familiar route feels refreshed, with a small stamp trail guiding the way.

Until September 20. Starts at B449 via here. SEA LIFE Bangkok

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