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

The best things to do in Bangkok this weekend (June 11-14)

A thoughtful film festival, a sprawling art fair and plenty of reasons to leave the house

Kaweewat Siwanartwong
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Look, the image of Bangkok as constantly grey and drizzly is probably overstated – but what genuinely can't be overstated is how much there is to do here when it does pour down on your hard-earned day off. Or the whole weekend. Or, well, the entire summer. The city stays packed with worthwhile distractions, even when the skies have other ideas.

This weekend, the Changing Climate, Changing Lives Film Festival offers a thoughtful escape through films examining how environmental change shapes communities around the world. Art lovers can spend hours lost among 1,100-plus booths at Illust Fusion Expo, where independent artists, limited-edition releases and festival exclusives take over Siam Paragon's fifth floor. Over at Sala Saneha, Sonic Minds Lab digs into the relationship between sound, wellbeing and human connection through screenings, performances and collective listening sessions.

After all that, if a slower pace sounds good, Friends, Records & Sober at STØCKHÖLME pairs vinyl selections with alcohol-free drinks and easy conversation. Prefer your caffeine with a soundtrack? The Coffee Rave from MILKLAB, MP3 Social and BEANS serves specialty brews alongside DJs spinning hip-hop, UK garage and global club sounds. Rain may dominate the forecast, but it hardly gets the final say.

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
  • Din Daeng

At Avani Ratchada Bangkok, The City Is Never One Color turns the hotel’s public spaces into a photographic portrait of the neighbourhood, tracing stories of community, individuality and belonging through the colours woven across daily life.

Created with Dr. Prachaya Piemkaroon and first-year students from Srinakharinwirot University’s College of Social Communication Innovation, the exhibition gathers more than 40 images across three chapters: When Colors Coexist, Quiet Colors and Balance. Together, they frame familiar streets, fleeting moments and shared spaces from fresh angles, revealing a district shaped not by one perspective, but by many.

June 8-30. Free entry. Avani Ratchada Bangkok. All day.

  • Things to do

Le Café des Stagiaires Bangkok has turned an ordinary night into a social experiment. Boards sit between bodies, pieces nudged while feet shift to the music. It is playful rather than precious, the sort of setting where concentration slips easily into conversation. DJs stay behind the decks, shaping a soundtrack that nudges the room forward without demanding attention. Tracks stretch and loosen, giving players time to stare down a rook or abandon the board altogether. Someone wins, someone loses, nobody keeps score for long. The appeal lies in the overlap, where strategy meets rhythm and strangers become temporary teammates. 

June 11. Free entry. Le Cafe des Stagiaires Bangkok, 7pm onwards

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  • Things to do
  • Rattanakosin

Set beside the Chao Phraya River, this slow-paced vintage market swaps frantic bargain hunting for long afternoons spent browsing carefully sourced fashion, handmade crafts, home décor and old-school collectibles. Every stall earns its place, so expect less clutter and more standout pieces with actual personality. 

Streetwear regulars arrive dressed for the occasion, traders happily explain the history behind their rarities and returning shoppers wander through searching for faded jackets, strange ornaments and forgotten treasures carrying just enough history to justify taking them home.

June 12-14. B100. Yodpiman Riverwalk. 3pm-11pm

  • Things to do

Climate change usually arrives as statistics, policy papers and increasingly grim news alerts. The Changing Climate, Changing Lives (CCCL) Film Festival prefers a more human approach. Returning this June, the annual event hands the mic to filmmakers, artists and storytellers charting how environmental shifts shape everyday experiences, from eroding shorelines and harsher weather patterns to quieter transformations unfolding across neighbourhoods.

The programme spans fiction, animation and experimental works from emerging voices around the world, many spotlighting stories that rarely reach wider audiences. Some films wrestle with loss and uncertainty, while others focus on resilience, collective action and the people finding inventive ways to adapt as the world changes around them.

June 12-21. Free entry, though seats must be reserved in advance here. Lido Connect and The Jim Thompson Art Center.

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  • Things to do
  • Khlong Toei

By this point in the year, most of us have spent far too much time staring at screens. Art in the PARQ offers a welcome excuse to step away for a while. Organised by The PARQ Life and Groundcontrol, the ten-day festival fills the mixed-use development with installations, live music, workshops and conversations centred on rest and emotional wellbeing.

Artist collective Eyedropper Fill creates a landscape of shifting light and ambient sound, while works by Yibso Ariyaganta sit alongside a free rock-painting activity for anyone craving a quieter moment. After office hours, live painting from Blue Dean and laid-back sets by GYPSHA take over. Weekends add an art market, wellbeing talks, food stalls and activities for four-legged companions.

Jun 12-21. Free entry. The PARQ Life. 11am-8pm

  • Things to do

Vintage hunters on the Thonburi side know the drill: when a secondhand market lands at ChangChui, you clear your schedule. This wardrobe-clear-out gathering swaps polished retail for racks packed with personality, where sellers bring pieces that deserve a second outing rather than another year hidden behind a cupboard door. Expect everything from well-worn vintage gems and pastel dresses to handbags, shoes and the sort of unexpected finds that make rummaging worthwhile. 

June 12-13. Free entry. ChangChui. 5pm-midnight

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Coffee culture and club culture have spent years circling each other, and this weekend they finally share the same room. MILKLAB, Melbourne-born collective MP3 Social and BEANS join forces for a free Coffee Rave, swapping late-night habits for caffeine-powered daytime dancing.

MP3 Social has built a loyal following through its coffee-fuelled gatherings across Australia, and for its Bangkok stop brings Australian DJ Crystal Cartier alongside local selectors Chaddubb and Danny Luseo. Expect free-flow specialty coffee, limited-edition merchandise and a soundtrack that jumps from hip-hop and UK garage to baile funk and global club sounds. 

June 12. Free entry. Register via here. BEANS, Songwat. 2pm-5pm

  • Things to do
  • Siam

More than 16,000 people turned up last year, so it’s hardly surprising that Illust Fusion Expo returns even bigger for 2026. For one weekend, the fifth floor of Siam Paragon becomes a playground for independent creativity, with 729 artists spread across 1,108 booths packed with original prints, handmade objects, limited-edition merchandise and festival-exclusive collectibles.

This year’s theme, Shine in Your Own Way, celebrates individuality through the image of a lantern, highlighting the distinct voices shaping Thailand’s illustration scene. Alongside the shopping, expect artist talks, live drawing sessions, copyright discussions and a playful pop-up cafe by Joojee World that adds an extra layer of charm to the proceedings.

June 13-14. B120 for one day or B220 for a two-day pass at the door. Paragon Hall, Siam Paragon. 10am-8pm

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  • Things to do

Bangkok’s music community gains a new gathering point this month as MŌCANA Sound launches its first edition. Built around the city’s deep-rooted listening culture and ever-shifting underground scene, the one-night event places sound at the centre of the experience, giving equal weight to careful listening and late-night movement.

Maft Sai, Tam Bryce, Tom Aquilina, Mumsfilijayja, DOTT and Meltmode guide audiences through vinyl rarities, Thai experimental works, house, disco and Southeast Asian club sounds. Expect a journey that values curiosity as much as dancing, with discoveries waiting at every turn.

June 13. B1,000-1,200 via here. Trinity Silom Hotel. 8pm-3am

  • Things to do
  • Silom

Sonic Minds Lab asks you to listen. Presented by Wonderfruit and MSCTY_Studio at Sala Saneha, the two-day programme explores how sound shapes the way we experience places, people and ourselves through performances, screenings, discussions and participatory sessions.

Created by James Greer and Nick Luscombe alongside Wonderfruit, the ongoing project examines the relationship between mind, nature and listening. Across the weekend, visitors can encounter works in progress, field recordings and graphic scores, while meeting the artists behind them. 

June 13-14. B600-1,000 via here. Sala Saneha. 1pm-9pm

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