Bangkok's got a lot in store for your weekend! From captivating art exhibitions to edgy gigs and happening parties, there's no shortage of cool ideas to make your days memorable. Immerse yourself in the city's cultural delights, groove to lively music, and dive into thrilling experiences. Get ready to have a fantastic time exploring the dynamic spirit of Bangkok!

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The best things to do in Bangkok this weekend
Anastasia Maslova and Damian Black map the uneasy terrain of human attachment, tracing bonds that bruise even as they brighten. Their exhibition studies intimacy as structure: fragile, ferocious, occasionally splintered. Affection leaves marks, yet those same marks seed renewal. Visitors move through a multisensory setting where photographs hang beside paintings, sculptures share space with wearable pieces and interactive objects ask for touch rather than distance. Candles release a signature scent developed with Crystals and Herbs, adding another quiet layer to the experience. Nothing feels decorative; each work circles the paradox of connection, at once tender and unnerving, destructive and generative. You wander, pause, reconsider your own history of closeness, and perhaps recognise that vulnerability often carries its own strange beauty.
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March 7-27. Free. Sathorn 11 Art Space, 5pm-2am
Envelopes arrive like quiet travellers, each carrying a fragment of someone else’s world. This exhibition gathers printmakers from across continents under the tender premise of ‘Mail Art’, where works pass hand to hand before settling side by side on a single wall. Every sheet holds a journey, a memory, a stamp that hints at distance crossed. Printmaking, after all, resists the lazy label of reproduction. It sits somewhere between laboratory and studio, balancing chemistry with instinct. Woodcut, etching, lithography and screen printing share space with newer experiments, each surface revealing social tensions, cultural codes and private fixations. Lines bite, ink lingers, paper breathes. On Saturdays March 7, March 14, March 21 and March 28 from 1pm-3pm, artists demonstrate their craft and welcome walk-ins to make a piece of their own.
March 3-29. Free. Pre-register here. Gallery B1 Room, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, 10am-10pm
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Skyline Film Bangkok waves goodbye to winter with a March programme that lingers on love in all its awkward, hopeful forms. Romantic dramas sit beside soft-centred rom-coms, the kind you quote years later without admitting it. The line-up reads like a well-thumbed diary: Past Lives, The Fault in Our Stars, The Perks of Being a Wallflower and Vicky Cristina Barcelona. Even The Hangover slips in. Thai favourite Seasons Change brings a rush of campus nostalgia, while How to Train Your Dragon and The Theory of Everything round things out. Swap the multiplex for open air, bring a friend and let the evening unfold gently.
March 19-21. B500 via here. River City Bangkok, 5.30pm and 8.30pm
Five female artists share a gallery, yet the exhibition reads more like a book passed between friends. Paintings line the walls as if they were pages, while the opening text appears as a table of contents split neatly into five chapters. Each section reflects a different perspective shaped by personal memories, lessons gathered over time and quiet reflections on that endlessly winding path called life. What makes the show engaging lies in how each artist speaks through her own visual language. One favours delicate storytelling, another leans on symbols that reveal meaning gradually. Placed side by side, the works build subtle layers that reward a slow walk around the room. Visitors linger, look again and notice details missed at first glance. Fans of any participating artist will likely treat this as a welcome reunion.
Until March 22. Free. PLAY art house, 10am-6pm
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18 artists gather under one roof, each with a past or upcoming connection to Joyman Gallery. The premise feels disarmingly simple: falling in love. Not the cinematic version, but that quiet, irrational moment when affection appears without warning and refuses explanation. No checklist of perfection, no debate over right or wrong. Just a sudden sense that something feels right. Several pieces reveal private corners of each artist’s world. A number rarely leave the studio, some previously unseen. Others remain personal favourites kept close for years. Together they create an atmosphere of sincerity, inviting viewers to rediscover the simple pleasure of liking a work without overthinking why.
Until March 22. Free. Joyman Gallery, 11am-6pm
A cheerful pop-up from The Gallery Shop and Flashback marks the birth month of Vincent van Gogh, one of the most beloved figures of the Post‑Impressionism era. The event borrows familiar motifs from his paintings and translates them into objects you can actually hold, wear or take home. The idea celebrates the pleasure of making things rather than obsessing over perfect results. That message echoes Van Gogh’s own story: a life filled with struggle and little recognition while he lived, yet driven by relentless creativity that eventually reshaped modern art. Browse a pop-up shop filled with sunflower patterns and swirling colour references, step into a photobooth styled with painterly backdrops, then turn snapshots into playful keychains decorated with charms inspired by his most recognisable symbols.
Until March 31. Free. The Gallery Shop, River City Bangkok, 10am-8pm
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March arrives and Funky Lam marks it in the most Lao manner possible: with heat, herbs and a generous hand. From Tuesday March 3, every woman who walks through the door receives tam mak hoong on the house, all month. Consider it less a promotion, more a gesture. This is papaya salad as Luang Prabang makes it. The fruit is shaved into ribbons rather than hacked into chunks, then worked patiently in a clay mortar until the dressing seeps through every strand. Padaek brings its deep, funky bass note, anchoring lime, chilli and tomato with unapologetic strength. The result tastes bold, savoury and fiercely itself.Â
Until March 31. Free. Funky Lam, 6pm-midnight
Across Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and China, smoke travels more freely than people. Borders mean little to drifting haze, and everyone ends up breathing the same troubled air. This exhibition approaches that shared reality through the work of Karn, who reflects on transboundary pollution not as a distant environmental headline but as a lived condition shaping everyday life across the region. The artist treats air as both subject and medium, turning an invisible crisis into something viewers can sense and contemplate. In doing so, the exhibition also reveals an uncomfortable truth: a resource described as public rarely feels equal within existing social systems. Karn frames climate disaster as more than a single catastrophic moment. Smoke, dust and relentless heat accumulate quietly over time, gradually rewriting the atmosphere around us until this uneasy state begins to feel disturbingly ordinary.
Until April 12. Free. VS Gallery, 12.30pm-6pm
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MOCANA began in New York in 2022 and now travels as a multi-disciplinary pop-up that treats culture as something lived rather than labelled. Built around five pillars, fine art, film, functional art, fashion and food, it gathers international and local names under one shifting roof. Exhibitions sit beside performances and workshops, each designed less for polite observation and more for participation. This edition frames culture as an archive you carry in your body. It lives in music, photographs, half-remembered conversations and objects kept for reasons you cannot quite explain. You listen, you move, you interact. Meaning forms through sound and shared experience, not wall text.
March 21. B1,111-1,666 via here. ASVIN, 2pm onwards
Volkswagen fans, pay attention. This night gathering returns in the form of a mini camping-style meet, inviting VW owners from across the country to come together. Expect a strong lineup of classic air-cooled models, newer Beetles, VW vans, Golfs and a wide variety of custom builds. Guests are encouraged to bring chairs, lanterns or small camping gear to add to the relaxed atmosphere. The location sits near Foodland, which stays open 24 hours, along with nearby barbecue restaurants that make it easy to hang out late into the night.Â
The Brio Mall (Sai 4). Free entry. March 21, 7pm-midnight
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