thingsmatter

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"Live to Work", Dwell's profile of thingsmatter and aTypical Shophouse.
thingsmatter is an art and architecture collective led by Savinee Buranasilapin and Tom Dannecker. The partners grew up in urban Thailand and rural America, respectively. They met in architecture school at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, then attended Princeton University and eventually established their practice in Bangkok.

The studio’s early work included a series of temporary interventions in commercial spaces, offering a critique of the consumer culture that hosted them, while celebrating the opportunity for communication with a diverse audience and the material extravagance uniquely provided by shopping malls and trade shows. Their work evolved, extending the working methods, tactility, and human scale of event architecture to more permanent buildings, including private residences.

A growing preoccupation with delicate, indeterminate structures and unfinished materials, alongside an interest in the cultural status of building as a process, has led thingsmatter to shift focus from conventional buildings toward constructed artworks, which remain anchored in an expanded field of architecture.

In Bangkok, they've taught, lectured, and conducted workshops at Chulalongkorn, Silpakorn, Kasetsart, Rangsit, and Bangkok Universities. Overseas, they've lectured about their work at Princeton, Harvard, and Columbia, and several international conferences.
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studio location
thingsmatter co. ltd,
50/1 Soi Sukhumvit 63 (Ekkamai)
Prakanong Nua, Wattana
Bangkok 10110
THAILAND

(+66) 89 925 2516

info@thingsmatter.com

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#WatchYourStep

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A psychogeographical study of Soi Ekamai, Bangkok.

Bangkok’s streets are a parade of ephemeral details, which are the product of colliding, seemingly unrelated interests: capitalism, entropy, aestheticization, laziness, graffitist egos, official corruption, the boredom of mosai drivers, the allowable bending radius of utility lines, and so on. Every meter hosts a witty, visually striking exhibit of bizarre juxtaposition or jury-rigged ingenuity. Surfaces and objects speak to each other and the microculture around them. It’s poetry.

Yet people walk past, oblivious, their heads buried in phones, scrolling through intangible, irrelevant images. #WatchYourStep is a walking guide to the non-designed minor spectacles of Ekamai’s streetscape, in an effort to elicit mindful pedestrianism.

The images shown in the gallery are from a collection of several hundred, taken in a single walk from Sukhumvit Road to Khlong Saen Saep. The same walk today would yield a completely different set of images.
Exhibited at _space_available_, thingsmatter's storefront gallery, for Bangkok Design Week 2020.

Visitors were given a 1:2000 printed map of Soi Ekamai, 12.5cm x1.5m, folded to the size of a phone.

They were also given a surgical mask to protect their lungs from air pollution, and several orange adhesive dots, which they were invited to place on interesting surfaces, as a registration of observation.

Shortly after the event, the COVID-19 pandemic response meant that EVERYONE was wearing surgical masks, and adhesive dots of many colors were on surfaces city-wide, as they were used as proof of passing a fever-test at the entrance to public buildings.