There’s a distinct weight to this April in Bangkok. The air is hotter, a heavy blanket of humidity seems to mirror the uncertainty of current affairs. As the horizon occasionally feels dimmed by the complexities of the life, we find ourselves standing on the slope of Songkran, the Thai New Year, a collective moment of holding hands and journeying through the heat toward a spiritual washing away at Four Seasons ART Space by MOCA Bangkok.
A Subliminal Cleanse: Finding the New Beginning at Four Seasons
I visited the art space with a singular goal; to enter with a cleansed mind, stripping away my own preoccupations to accept the artists’ interpretations as pure energy. What I found in the group exhibition New Beginning was a profound zest of life that felt like a cool rain on a scorched street.


The Alchemy of Japan and Thailand
Visual poetry where the discipline of the stroke meets the freedom of the pour. The exhibition is a fair in the mix. There is a visible Japanese cultivation, a meticulous, meditative precision in the linework and layering that meets the expansive, emotive warmth of Thai contemporary practice. Featuring Yuta Okuda, Maho Takahashi, Jidapa Chansirisarthaporn, and Ratchawoot Kuruwongwattana, the show whispers of change.

A rhythmic pulse of ink and pigment that mimics the heartbeat of a city in transition.
Théo de Beaumont | Gallery Visitor
The abstract colors are decorative; and in rejuvenating forms. They represent the subtle shifts in awareness, the way a memory changes shape over time or how a daily routine suddenly feels like a sacred ritual. In the presence of these works, the uncertainty of the world outside is replaced by the certainty of human creativity.

A Story of Heat and Hope of a Colorful Tomorow
Walking through the gallery, the transition from the riverside heat into this curated sanctuary felt like a literal New Beginning. While the news cycles may offer little comfort, the art here suggests that renewal is a grand explosion, and a subtle transformation in how we perceive our journey. It is an invitation to breathe, to look at the abstract and see the possible.
A mirror to the soul, reflecting that every ending is merely a color shift toward the light.

Photos are courtesy of Yuta Okuda‘s IG post.
This article is a complimentary editorial courtesy of Le Souverain Bien De Paris; our contemporary art dilettante at The Silomer, business and lifestyle blog based in Bangkok.
🎊 Opening : April 4, 2026 (16:00 – 19:00)
🗓 April 4 – June 4, 2026
📍 Four Seasons Hotel Bangkok ART Space by MOCA BANGKOK
In collaboration with CURU Gallery and Kamonkorn Rakarj.
Disclaimer: The editorial is curated by an appetizingly perceived intent; we are disjoined of responsibility to any urge for a grasp of cross-personal visual interpretations that are otherwise to ours.
