
Review: Art confronting atrocities – there are Seeds of Hate and Hope at the Sainsbury Centre, Norwich.
2 December 2025 • Tabish Khan
A hard-hitting exhibition where art reflects on genocides, ethnic cleansing, and human rights abuses.
Jakkai Siributr (b. 1969, Bangkok, Thailand) works with textiles, embroidery and installation to examine the social, spiritual and political threads running through contemporary Thai life. Grounded in artisanal craft and meticulous handwork, his pieces often weave together found garments, ritual symbols and personal testimonies, creating layered surfaces that function as both narrative and archive.
Siributr’s practice frequently addresses displacement, belief systems and the lived impact of conflict, using fabric as a medium for storytelling and repair. His works invite viewers into a tactile, intimate encounter—forms that carry the weight of communal memory while also revealing the quiet agency embedded in material and making. Through this blend of precision and humanity, Siributr transforms textile traditions into powerful sites of reflection and cultural witness.

2 December 2025 • Tabish Khan
A hard-hitting exhibition where art reflects on genocides, ethnic cleansing, and human rights abuses.

19 September 2025 • Meike Brunkhorst
V&A South Kensington is the perfect hub for promoting creativity in the capital during the annual London Design Festival.

27 January 2025 • Camille Moreno
Part of an immersive solo show that includes three other large-scale textile works, the colossal embroidery is the clear wow-piece.

17 January 2025 • Tabish Khan
Violence, hair, school memories, underwater worlds and gold.

19 April 2024 • Mark Westall
The Bangkok Art Biennale (BAB) Foundation presents The Spirits of Maritime Crossing, a group exhibition by artists from Southeast Asia… Read More