Showing posts with label bangkok. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bangkok. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

13th Sept 2022 Tuesday - Thai dining



After the afternoon's landscape design presentation by Mint, I asked if I could take her and Jinni out for dinner with my family. Before she answered she checked with Freddy who immediately called to invite his boss. After Teck declined, Freddy proceeded to invite a selection of mutual friends to make up the ten, which I thought strange at the time as I was hosting the dinner not him. 

But I let him continue,  in the car ride to the club (to drop me off for squash) he rang his list of friends and colleagues; speaking in Hakka. One of the people he invited was JP whom I thought was a strange choice, I had a tough time working with him as I thought that he was slow in responding to the demands of the job. 

At dinner, I sat myself next to Mint, JP was seated to my left. He told us about his family, anecdotes about his childhood and uni. Mint thought that the food was yummy (she kept putting morsels of food on my plate) but the conversation was hilarious. I found the company refreshing, and decided that I should give myself time to know people as many are 'good guys' (to use Sam's assessment of the man) 

And perhaps this what Freddy's intention as well,  as I'm sure he had observed my run ins with JP about steel design issues. 

Wednesday, August 31, 2022

29 Aug 2022 Monday - post-Covid company trip


 I am not sure why this photo floated up to the surface after 6 years (28.5.2016) but I am very proud however that many of these people were still with us or re-joined us for our following company trip to Bangkok.

Saturday, September 5, 2015

Talking about Sketching

Last night, I took some of my sketches for a talk at a PAMSC (Local Architect's Institute) gathering. The aim of the presentation was to highlight our chapter's activities especially our study trips to Beijing, Shanghai and more recently Hangzhou as well as the European and local trips.

I thought it would be interesting (and different) to talk about how I record my trips - through the medium of pen and paper instead of film and camera.
There is no time like the present. To sketch and record events - usually the best times to do so are when one is waiting for something to happen - for the plane to take off, in a traffic jam, waiting for luggage, or food to arrive.

I sketch in solitude mostly as this is a chance for me to lose myself. But at other times, I don't mind a bit of company - like when I sat with a row of Primary School children in Hangzhou to sketch their old town. I asked the girl 'Is this a good likeness?' She examined my work and said 'Not really'

Many of our study trips are recorded in here, simple and cheap notebooks made from palm paper.

The Great Wall at Badaling

Wat Arun, Bangkok
With cheap medium such as the Artline Pen 0.4 (RM 2.50).
My favourite breakfast places in Georgetown
...or with ball-point pens from hotel rooms and sometimes with my Hero fountain pen.
3 points of view in the Frankfurt Cathedral
I talked about 'losing' myself in the act of sketching and how it results in actually getting myself lost - detached from the rest of tour group. But there is usually someone to watch over me.

Recording a building this way and at this angle is similar to using a camera but I think the act of seeing and drawing it makes the memory of the place stronger. When I look at this sketch, I remember most vividly the sound of skateboards hitting the concrete.

Helsinki - journal entries
 Most of the time, my sketches are 'notes' to myself and observations about the place and the people - such as what my fellow travelers are eating for breakfast.
Bay Hotel, Singapore
Sketching also allows me to dissect a place - to visually measure and record. I have a collection of 'measured drawings' of hotel rooms.
Pratunam, Bangkok
It does not always have to be a landmark or prominent building - recording the mundane is a good way of seeing beauty in daily life and of ever-day people.
Mind maps of routes taken are a good way for me to get an overview with glimpses of places seen along the way. These 'maps' are done retrospectively, of course - I ran these routes with Louis Tiong in Morocco.
Context and Memory - helped by some props and souvenirs from the 'site' in Valencia
More context - ink on paper, washed with soy sauce because we were in China (this is Wangshu's NingBo Museum of Contemporary Arts)
...and washed with espresso because we were in Florence.
I ended the ten minute presentation with this simple sketch.

I told them about Marcel and how he mentored me (probably without knowing it) and how he left Kuching for Toronto. And later, when I found out that he was terminally ill - I emailed him photos and sketches of his old haunts; usually food places such as this one near a Chinese temple on Carpenter Street. When that didn't seem enough, I mailed these postcard sketches to him. Later on, to add another dimension to his experience of 'home' - I washed the sketches with black vinegar (to evoke the memory of Teochew Kolo Mee which this is traditionally served with). I asked Marcel to smell the postcards - but I never got a reply because shortly after he passed away.

Months later, when his wife visited us in Kuching, I asked her if Marcel received the postcards. She replied 'Yes, he did'.  I asked her 'Did he smell them?'  She replied again 'Yes, he did, what's up with that?'  And I explained.

Marcel - fastidious as ever, humming quietly to himself as I prepared to photograph him


Friday, July 13, 2012

Bangkok Sketch Crawl


I believe that the term ‘sketch-crawl’ is derived from the term ‘pub-crawl’ – the latter involves going from pub to pub, drinking; meeting people in a new place. The ‘crawl’ could be taken to mean the leisurely pace at which matters are conducted or the position one ends up in after the numerous drinks.  

A sketch crawl is conducted in much the same spirit; with participants agreeing to meet at a destination, then moving from place to place; sketching.









In Bangkok, a sketch crawl takes on a different meaning with the downtown traffic snarl slowing things to a crawl literally which can be frustrating unless you make hay while the sun shines. These sketches are done as the bus we were in moved in instalments of twenty metres every 3 minutes – we were late for our planned dinner show which had to be postponed but at least one person is happy.





The happy troupe at the Teak Mansion


Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Wat s up?



On June the 30th, everyone (almost) from DNA got on a plane and flew to Bangkok for a holiday together - three generations aged from 2 to 72 and many other numbers in between. For 5 days, we shared a bus and a hotel (the 4th floor of the Bangkok Ecotel); tried Thai food and experiences. I shared in their excitement, but mostly I was happy to observe while shopping sprees were planned and conducted; food tested and re-tasted. And happy to sketch from the window as our bus crawled through downtown traffic.

I am happiest with my sketches of Wat Arun ' Temple of Dawn' - across the Chao Phraya River; they did not need further touching up and was finished in the time we were there. 
I had a hour and used it to complete these three pen sketches while my colleagues climbed to the upper tiers of the temple structure.



Arlene took a photo of me sketching at Wat Arun

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Friday, June 3, 2011

Thai Lunch






















We arrived in Bangkok at 4 pm (3 pm local time) - too late for lunch and too early for dinner; undaunted we led our tour guide to a hole in the wall restaurant called "Chotechitr" for our first taste of home cooked Thai food. There were 6 tables inside the shop and one outside by the street; run by a well-spoken (in English) lady who spent her childhood in Italy. The solitary cook meant that our meals took some time to arrive; which was fine as the neighbourhood was charming and people friendly.
We ate banana flower salad and crispy vermicelli in a tangy spicy dressing, followed by fried fish with mango salad, red curry prawns and chicken in yellow curry - all in the guise of a pre-dinner snack. Which ended up being dinner for all of us. 


Map courtesy of Yaowalak