First published: March 2026
For over 20 years, Pichai Rattanapornchai has been drawing on the pavements of his home city trying to fulfil a very personal mission
Walking the streets of Bangkok, in the city’s
swelter, it is best to stick to the shade – and to
stay alert. Cockroaches scurry across cracked
paving stones as motorbikes trespass in a city constantly
delivering. This metropolis, perennially in transition, is
never dull; there is always something to catch your eye.

Pichai Rattanapornchai in 2025. Image: Stephen Lorriman and Tim Williams
So it is when you first encounter the drawings of Pichai
Rattanapornchai on the pavement. At first you may think
that a government engineer has scribbled such diagrams;
perhaps they are finally taking down the city’s infamous
tangles of electrical wires. But look closer, see what you
can make out. A kettle? A no-stopping sign? A building
of a certain architectural style? The South Korean flag?
The British Isles? And amidst the scrawled Thai fragments,
the occasional English word or phrase, such as: “Map
Collin World” . You’re caught in the intricacies and the ciphers in the work. A surreal riddle, and you find yourself
wanting to know more.

a Khmer statue, product logos and diagrams drawn near a kerb. Image: Stephen Lorriman and Tim Williams
In the distance, a slight man crouches on the ground, a blue bin bag at his side, cheap marker pen in hand. “People say these are mind maps,” says Rattanapornchai, “They’re not. They’re city plans. The city plans of other countries.” What these “city plans” actually mean, however, is unclear – even to native Thai speakers. For Rattanapornchai, he is not making art. He is scratching away at the surface to collect evidence. “I don’t care whether it’s beautiful. I’m collecting evidence about what happened to me,” he says. He’s sticking to a plan, a mission to fulfil “a promise I made to myself” .

Rreferences to Kampuchea and The Eagles’ Hotel California. Image: Stephen Lorriman and Tim Williams
By STEPHEN LORRIMAN
This is an article extract; read the full article in Raw Vision #126.